Qili
Qiqi (pinyin: qí lì), also known as Shibuli, Bang, Lu Zha, Xiaolie, is a single-reed gas-sounding instrument of the Qiang and Tibetan peoples. Popular in Sichuan Province, Aba Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Maowen Qiang Autonomous County, Heishui, Li County, Wenchuan and other places.
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type:clarinet air musical instrument
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nickname:Shibuli, Bang, Lu Zha, Xiao Lie
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Pinyin:qí lì
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nationality:Qiang, Tibetan
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origin:Qin Han
history
It is a single-reed gas-sounding instrument of the Qiang and Tibetan peoples. The Qiang people are also called Shibuli and Gangs. The Tibetans call it Lu Zha and Xiao Lie.
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works collection
news
Qiqi was mistakenly called Qiang flute in a previously published music dictionary.
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It is a wind instrument that is very popular among the Qiang and Tibetan people. Whether it is in the spare time, happy harvest, or during the festivals, it is a musical instrument that people cannot do without.
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When playing Qiji, the body of the pipe is placed upright, the mouth contains a double mouthpiece, and the air drum is blown. The six-hole bamboo flute is the same, the two pipes emit the same pitch, the range is c1-c2, and there is one octave.
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Its body is made of bamboo, and it is made of two bamboo tubes with the same length, thickness, hole spacing and sound sequence tied side by side. It is mostly made of oil bamboo that grows on the local high mountains. This kind of bamboo has long bamboo joints and thin bamboo tubes.
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