Houston Lion Dance VLOG - CNY 2022 - Part 3 ( feat. NVHB & Soaring Phoenix )

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  • Опубликовано: 20 мар 2022
  • Welcome to the last part of our CNY Lion dance adventure through Houston, TX
    - - - - - - -
    🎮Follow us on Twitch where we play games with you guys:
    / leontruong
    🏅Follow the Adventure in Instagram if you are into that:
    Instagram: / who_is_leon
    🎮Aidan's Gaming Channel: / @flowny8198
    - - - - - - -
    Videos You might Like:
    Surprised Tyler with a lion dance costume:
    • SURPRISED MY 8 YR OLD ...
    Visiting A lion dance team:
    • SURPRISE TRIP TO HOUST...
    Lion Dance Puppet:
    • Lion Dance & Chinese N...
    Lion Dance Pet Discover how to Lion Dance:
    • Lai Lai Discovers How ...
    - - - - - - -
    📹 Gears we used to shoot this video:
    The Main Camera: amzn.to/2u7578T
    The little camera: amzn.to/2DZ9A1z
    Cheap Mic with that Sound Awesome: amzn.to/2EJ2R9R
    Keep the Video Smooth: amzn.to/2UtU3f7
    16mm Lens: amzn.to/2BWPzEw
    35mm Lens: amzn.to/2JOk6IN
    - - - - - - -
    #LionDance #舞狮 #MúaLân #Múasưtử #LionDanceDrumming #狮子舞打鼓 #kidliondance #hiệusuấtmúasưtử #舞狮表演 #LionDance2018 #chineseliondance #dragondance #chineseculture #LionDancevlog

Комментарии • 23

  • @owenbinnguyen791
    @owenbinnguyen791 2 года назад +6

    SP got the best buddha ever to do it

  • @SPLIONDANCE
    @SPLIONDANCE 2 года назад +10

    Always good seeing you, Leon! Until next time. 👐🏻

  • @anthonyliondance5342
    @anthonyliondance5342 2 года назад +1

    OMG I LOVE LEON!

  • @tho7482
    @tho7482 2 года назад

    Tomorrow is going to be lion dance on teo chew Temple

  • @venomsmoke585
    @venomsmoke585 2 года назад +1

    Oh Leon it’s way past Lunar New Year but okay you just record lion dance but I still don’t know what part of Houston your are in
    [Gosh Dang!!!!]

  • @legend_slayer8745
    @legend_slayer8745 2 года назад

    I love your vids I love lion dances I have two lions have a great day

  • @modelav28
    @modelav28 2 года назад +1

    Where did u get tyler’s small green lion?

  • @yourdog6412
    @yourdog6412 2 года назад +1

    me missing all of these vids making me jealous ngl lol

  • @SirNoobishland
    @SirNoobishland 2 года назад

    Lots of shows to be done in Houston?
    Suppose Dallas has less?

  • @lynox908
    @lynox908 2 года назад +1

    No I’m 2 weeks late

  • @Maitchell
    @Maitchell 2 года назад

    hey leon when you bought a lion in Vietnam how much money was it to ship from Vietnam to Texas?

  • @liannele9424
    @liannele9424 2 года назад

    Is your shopping vlogs going to continue or is it postponed

  • @luhcalm3t
    @luhcalm3t 2 года назад

    what songs or playlist do you use for your video?

  • @liannele9424
    @liannele9424 2 года назад

    Lion dance (traditional Chinese: 舞獅; simplified Chinese: 舞狮; pinyin: wǔshī) is a form of traditional dance in Chinese culture and other Asian countries in which performers mimic a lion's movements in a lion costume to bring good luck and fortune. The lion dance is usually performed during the Chinese New Year and other Chinese traditional, cultural and religious festivals. It may also be performed at important occasions such as business opening events, special celebrations or wedding ceremonies, or may be used to honour special guests by the Chinese communities.
    The Chinese lion dance is normally operated by two dancers, one of whom manipulates the head while the other forms the rear end of the lion. It is distinguishable from the dragon dance which is performed by many people who hold the long sinuous body of the dragon on poles. Chinese lion dance fundamental movements can be found in Chinese martial arts, and it is commonly performed to a vigorous drum beat.
    There are two main forms of the Chinese lion dance, the Northern Lion and the Southern Lion. Both forms are commonly found in China and around the world especially in Southeast Asia, the Southern Lion predominates as it was spread by the Chinese diaspora communities who are historically mostly of Southern Chinese origin. Versions of lion dance related to the Chinese lion are also found in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Tibet and Vietnam. Besides the Chinese-based lion dance, the other forms of lion dance also exist in Indonesia, for example the Barong dance in Javanese and Balinese cultures.
    Contents
    1 History
    2 Regional types
    2.1 Chinese Northern Lion
    2.2 Chinese Southern Lion
    2.3 Green Lion
    2.4 Vietnamese Lion
    2.5 Japanese Lion
    2.6 Korean Lion
    2.7 Tibetan Lion
    2.8 Indonesian Lion
    2.9 East Africa
    3 Music and instruments
    4 Costumes
    5 Association with Wushu/Kung Fu
    6 During Chinese New Years and festivals
    7 Evolution and competition
    8 In politics
    9 In popular culture
    10 See also
    11 Notes
    12 External links
    History[edit]
    Details of the Song Dynasty painting "One Hundred Children Playing in the Spring" (百子嬉春图页) by Su Hanchen (苏汉臣) showing children performing the lion dance.
    There has been an old tradition in China of dancers wearing masks to resemble animals or mythical beasts since antiquity, and performances described in ancient texts such as Shujing where wild beasts and phoenix danced may have been masked dances.[1][2] In Qin Dynasty sources, dancers performing exorcism rituals were described as wearing bearskin mask,[1] and it was also mentioned in Han Dynasty texts that "mime people" (象人) performed as fish, dragons, and phoenixes.[3][4] However, lion is not native to China (a species found in Northeast China Panthera youngi had long become extinct),[5] and the Lion Dance therefore has been suggested to have originated outside of China from countries such as India or Persia,[6][7] and introduced via Central Asia.[8] According to ethnomusicologist Laurence Picken, the Chinese word for lion itself, shi (獅, written as 師 in the early periods), may have been derived from the Persian word šer.[9] The earliest use of the word shizi meaning lion first appeared in Han Dynasty texts and had strong association with Central Asia (an even earlier but obsolete term for lion was suanni (狻麑 or 狻猊), and lions were presented to the Han court by emissaries from Central Asia and the Parthian Empire.[10] Detailed descriptions of Lion Dance appeared during the Tang Dynasty and it was already recognized by writers and poets then as a foreign dance, however, Lion dance may have been recorded in China as early as the third century AD where "lion acts" were referred to by a Three Kingdoms scholar Meng Kang (孟康) in a commentary on Hanshu.[11][12][13] In the early periods it had association with Buddhism: it was recorded in a Northern Wei text, Description of Buddhist Temples in Luoyang (洛陽伽藍記), that a parade for a statue of Buddha of a temple was led by a lion to drive away evil spirits.[12][14][15] An alternative suggestion is therefore that the dance may have developed from a local tradition that appropriated the Buddhist symbolism of lion.[5]
    Japanese illustration of a Lion Dance that some argued represents the Tang Dynasty lion dance described by Bai Juyi.[16] The original painting is dated to the Heian period.
    There were different versions of the dance in the Tang Dynasty. In the Tang court, the lion dance was called the Great Peace Music (太平樂, Taiping yue) or the Lion Dance of the Five Directions (五方師子舞) where five large lions of different colours and expressing different moods were each led and manipulated on rope by two persons, and accompanied by 140 singers.[12][17] In another account, the 5 lions were described as each over 3 metres tall and each had 12 "lion lads", who may tease the lions with red whisks.[12][18][19] Another version of the lion dance was described by the Tang poet Bai Juyi in his poem "Western Liang Arts" (西凉伎), where the dance was performed by two hu (胡, meaning here non-Han people from Central Asia) dancers who wore a lion costume made of a wooden head, a silk tail and furry body, with eyes gilded with gold and teeth plated with silver as well as ears that moved, a form that resembles today's Lion Dance.[12][20][21] By the eighth century, this lion dance had reached Japan. During the Song Dynasty the lion dance was commonly performed in festivals and it was known as the Northern Lion during the Southern Song.
    The Southern Lion is a later development in the south of China originating in the Guangdong province. There are a number of myths associated with the origin of the Southern Lion: one story relates that the dance originated as a celebration in a village where a mythical monster called Nian was successfully driven away;[8][22] another has it that the Qianlong Emperor dreamt of an auspicious animal while on a tour of Southern China, and ordered that the image of the animal be recreated and used during festivals. However it is likely that the Southern Lion of Guangzhou is an adaptation of the Northern Lion to local myths and characteristics, perhaps during the Ming Dynasty.[23][24]
    Regional types[edit]
    The two main types of lion dance in China are the Northern and Southern Lions. There are however also a number of local forms of lion dance in different regions of China, and some of these lions may have significantly differences in appearance, for example the Green or Hokkien Lion (青獅, Qing Shi) and the Taiwanese or Yutien Lion (明狮, Ming Shi),[citation needed] popular with the Hokkien and the Taiwanese people.[25][26][27] Other ethnic minorities groups in China also have their own lion dances, for example, the lion dance of the Muslim minority in Shenqiu County in Henan called the Wen Lion,[28][29] the Yongdeng lion dance in Yongdeng County, Lanzhou, Gansu,[30] the lion dance in Yongning County, and Wuzhong, Ningxia,[citation needed]and the Hakka Lion - popular with the Hakka people, which is very similar to both the Hokkien and Taiwanese Lions and even the Wen Lion, but the Hakka lion may or may not have a horn on its head.[citation needed] Chinese lion dances usually involve two dancers but may also be performed by one. The larger lions manipulated by two persons may be referred to as great lions (太獅), and those manipulated by one person little lions (少獅). The performances may also be broadly divided into civil (文獅) and martial (武獅) styles. The civil style emphasizes the character and mimics and behaviour of the lion

  • @wmcng
    @wmcng 2 года назад

    Hi leon!

  • @wawawho18_adventures
    @wawawho18_adventures 2 года назад

    4 hr is nothing! see u!!!

  • @2MOCHI_JIHOON44
    @2MOCHI_JIHOON44 2 года назад

    Leon. No hard feelings but don’t put that music on when they are lion dancing because I want to hear the drum, symbols, and gong! Love you leon

  • @tho7482
    @tho7482 2 года назад

    You are in Bellaire

  • @zwart39
    @zwart39 2 года назад

    alright leon no more excuses not to stream now :)

    • @wmcng
      @wmcng 2 года назад

      Lmao

  • @kebivb
    @kebivb 2 года назад

    u mean may not