Spring on River Qing - YangQin

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 88

  • @WilliamFriedson
    @WilliamFriedson 15 лет назад +29

    a wise musician once told me that our heart and mind hear the notes, but our soul hears the spaces between the notes. In your wonderful playing, the notes and silence are both music. Thank you for this wonderful music. i play celtic hammered dulcimer, and your playing inspires me beyond words. thank you.

  • @patriciafriedson8860
    @patriciafriedson8860 4 года назад +18

    my gosh, what incredible playing. what purity of tone, what mastery of volume, what excellent rhythm, all with elegant simplicity. And so much respect for the music. He sets it free, and lets it be. Thatis love for the music. Today i have heard true yang qin playing. Thank You.

    • @noobsmasher123
      @noobsmasher123 2 месяца назад

      All that while dressed casually. Thos guys been practicing since age 3 guaranteed.

  • @TheMadisonHang
    @TheMadisonHang 6 лет назад +25

    i love how he's wearing a BLUES shirt love it

  • @caitling1708
    @caitling1708 2 года назад +5

    i have listened to this once a week for the past three years. it just Does Something to me. so evocative. so bright, almost bouncy, but it makes me want to sob for some reason.

  • @raymeow5234
    @raymeow5234 6 лет назад +6

    My favourite piece that i had ever played b4.

  • @NativeImagesPG
    @NativeImagesPG 11 лет назад +4

    Wonderful Music...Brought Beauty to my day...thank you.

  • @stanhong007
    @stanhong007 9 лет назад +3

    Love the rendition. Wonderful performance.

  • @Drbolla345
    @Drbolla345 13 лет назад +2

    The Chinese and this instrument fits hand in hand. I can't see any other instrument that compliments the culture completely. Whenever I hear the Yangqin play, all I see is the Chinese landscape, its history and people. feels like it was meant to be.

  • @DarkVoidDan
    @DarkVoidDan 10 лет назад +21

    Best instrument ever, Period.

  • @basti4ever
    @basti4ever 15 лет назад +4

    thats just awesome...
    what a speed an precision, just wow! And the instrument itself sounds beautiful too

  • @sladananikolic8913
    @sladananikolic8913 3 года назад

    Amazing, just pure love and peace. Thank you for playing

  • @zack_120
    @zack_120 9 лет назад +2

    Wang Se 的清江之春一曲,扬琴演奏中最好的一位,主要因为他的演奏技巧有创新、独特,左右手其实是同时也走两个声部-难能可贵!

  • @Pontius888
    @Pontius888 4 года назад +3

    7 dislikes??? Must be some butterfingers who can't play this amazing instrument!!!!

  • @nosephpiffe
    @nosephpiffe 10 лет назад +1

    Beautiful music!

  • @MikeTrainormusic
    @MikeTrainormusic 10 лет назад +1

    Beautiful music. Really well played, wow!

  • @ckej1035
    @ckej1035 11 месяцев назад +1

    What a beautiful piece! I would like to know what techniques he is using? Can someone elaborate?

  • @samybonita
    @samybonita 9 лет назад +2

    Wonderful music!

  • @onlysinner8824
    @onlysinner8824 16 лет назад

    wow,thats just beautiful.

  • @kevyhot
    @kevyhot 3 года назад

    So beautiful

  • @mr_square
    @mr_square 4 года назад +1

    Our Shining days

  • @BudLarsenjr
    @BudLarsenjr 6 лет назад

    An excellent performance!

  • @5stringofFernandoSor
    @5stringofFernandoSor 12 лет назад

    Masterful. This is virtuosic and extraordinary. Chinese music is so soothing and peaceful to me.

  • @xinruanfly
    @xinruanfly 11 лет назад +5

    The player's name is Yuan Ke actually..

  • @apeirogon9289
    @apeirogon9289 9 лет назад +1

    Holy shit, guy killed it!!

  • @Weeping-Angel
    @Weeping-Angel 2 дня назад

    I wish I watched this video sooner

  • @TheOneToxic
    @TheOneToxic 13 лет назад

    oh yeah, not one dislike, lets please keep it this way people for this truly amazing music !!!!

  • @grparkourgr
    @grparkourgr 11 лет назад

    amazing performance thank you. :)

  • @azimuth457
    @azimuth457 13 лет назад

    Amazing! so well played!

  • @graysight
    @graysight Месяц назад

    a variation from this instrument existed on europe in so called middle ages, and also in india and so called middle east. later in europe harpsichord was developed from it. it is tuned differently o each country of course..

  • @sue4341
    @sue4341 7 лет назад

    Talented! Awesome!

  • @QuentinLars
    @QuentinLars 11 лет назад +1

    I posted this on my facebook page!!!! great work, man! tai hao le!!! hen hao tin!!!!

  • @aaronyeager83
    @aaronyeager83 14 лет назад

    That is so amazing.

  • @ujmi
    @ujmi 15 лет назад +1

    beautiful :)

  • @elfie1015
    @elfie1015 14 лет назад

    @celethon The yanqin's notes get higher as it moves upward, and right-->left. The bridges are not the octaves, they just keep the note the same. Most scales use 2 bridges.

  • @VampireBatLord
    @VampireBatLord 12 лет назад

    that and it also makes any culture sound extremely ancient or extinct too.

  • @ledzeppelin27
    @ledzeppelin27 15 лет назад

    that guy just blew me away
    give THAT man a ci-gar

  • @electronixtar
    @electronixtar  15 лет назад +1

    It's called 颤竹。Literally means tremolo bamboo sticks.

  • @ms0325604
    @ms0325604 13 лет назад +1

    這首曲子好像都是自己在伴奏自己~
    就已經如此優美動聽~
    不知是否有人曾使用別種樂器來伴奏這首揚琴曲???
    真是好奇ㄚ!

  • @Chrispy77
    @Chrispy77 7 лет назад

    Such skill!!

  • @dustinvanhoose6186
    @dustinvanhoose6186 4 года назад

    Love it!

  • @cf18
    @cf18 13 лет назад

    Amazing.

  • @CommentCandy1
    @CommentCandy1 13 лет назад

    ok, now, can anyone tell me if the music for the part on Karate Kid with the Cobra trick is coming from a Yang Qin? I love the way it sounds. It's one of my favorite Chinese instruments. It's even making me feel enthusiastic as i type!

  • @magerpker173
    @magerpker173 13 лет назад

    so that's where perfect world got it from :P

  • @msoulja
    @msoulja 15 лет назад

    Love this

  • @HaganeSteel
    @HaganeSteel 11 лет назад

    Brilliant.

  • @Amityel76
    @Amityel76 13 лет назад

    its really nice;thank you for this video:)))

  • @elfie1015
    @elfie1015 14 лет назад

    @marco21falcon A piano is the same as a yanqin. The tuning at least. When you play a scale on the yangqin, it's just different notes, like the piano. Does that answer your question? Sorry if it doesn't.

  • @biffyplayspiano9325
    @biffyplayspiano9325 2 года назад

    awesome

  • @Kasumi8779
    @Kasumi8779 11 лет назад +2

    I have a possible theory about the Yangqin's origins. My opinion is that it originally came from Persia, but might've got to Indochina as the Dan Tam Thap Luc, then the Dan Tam Thap Luc was brought to China. There are many Vietnamese instruments that Chinese Instruments came from. Ever heard of a Duxianqin? It originally was a Vietnamese instrument called the Dan Bau. Also the Pipa, like the Yanqin no one knows it's origins, but modern scholarship suggests a non-Chinese origin, it may have also come from Vietnam as the Dan Ty Ba. How good is my theory about the Yangqin?

    • @Em-su9lm
      @Em-su9lm 10 лет назад +2

      Interesting theory, it's definitely possible that it spread from Persia over India and Sukothai to the rest of Indochina. Though the dulcimer having its origin in Western Asia is still controversially discussed theory.

    • @SuperNguyenChannel
      @SuperNguyenChannel 10 лет назад +4

      Well many Vietnamese instruments of "Chinese" origin may have came the other way. The Dan Ty Ba has less frets than the Pipa for example, so the Pipa must be an improvement on it. Others like the Dan Tam and Sanxian suggest a Chinese origin. The Dan Bau though is completely Vietnamese as the only people who play the Duxianqin, the Chinese version, being the Jing people, are Vietnamese

    • @wenyizhao5580
      @wenyizhao5580 7 лет назад +2

      +Kasumi97 In fact, the pipa's origin is in China. Yangqin was brought to VN by the Chinese at Chợ Lớn. The Yangqin is originated from Persia, then it was introduced to China through the Silk Road and after that the instrument is localized and changed so it is different from the original. Many Vietnamese traditional instruments have origins of China except Đàn bầu due to the time of Chinese domination in Vietnam.

    • @aethernity8270
      @aethernity8270 9 месяцев назад

      That right

  • @KrisDuhaime
    @KrisDuhaime 7 лет назад

    ....ahhhhh.....🎵🎶

  • @2012revolution
    @2012revolution 6 лет назад

    VIRTUOSO

  • @tonberry97m
    @tonberry97m 15 лет назад

    i would like one

  • @aidanhoward-chen1769
    @aidanhoward-chen1769 12 лет назад

    i play spring on qing river on yang qin but your still better then me

  • @TheMadisonHang
    @TheMadisonHang 6 лет назад

    its so easy to play chords on that thing!

  • @domjermano674
    @domjermano674 5 лет назад

    Holy .

  • @marco21falcon
    @marco21falcon 14 лет назад

    wierd question....would it be possible to tune a piano in the same scale as a yangqin?

  • @limsj6
    @limsj6 15 лет назад

    what is the technique to do a tremolo on one hand?

  • @jackxiang2021
    @jackxiang2021 11 лет назад

    厉害

  • @celethon
    @celethon 14 лет назад

    how is the yangqin set up, like, do the notes get higher right->left? Are they separated by octaves like, one octave between each of the "bridges"?

  • @tanaugustine6330
    @tanaugustine6330 6 лет назад

    if any body knows whether he offer classes , pls let let know his contact , e mail or whatapp or wechat .....

  • @5stringofFernandoSor
    @5stringofFernandoSor 12 лет назад +1

    Does he just hammer the strings or can he pluck too? Some notes look like he is pulling up on the string to get a forceful note.

    • @kazumayanoitsumo
      @kazumayanoitsumo 6 лет назад +2

      Yep! In case you haven't done your own research by this point... Normally you hit the strings with the rubber-tipped top end of the hammer, but sometimes the piece calls for using the bottom end to pluck the string. Some pieces call for using the top part of the hammer, but the side that's not capped by rubber. Some pieces even call for hitting the wooden cases (which hide the tuning mechanisms) on the side for percussive effect

  • @gringusbumbersnutch
    @gringusbumbersnutch 7 месяцев назад +1

    3:02

  • @BRM598
    @BRM598 10 лет назад +2

    This instrument is forma Iran. I know that because I´m persian and I play this instrument. In persian it´s name is Santur

    • @SuperNguyenChannel
      @SuperNguyenChannel 10 лет назад +3

      Yeah, but it may have came to China indirectly. There are Hammered Dulcimers all around Asia and as you get closer to China, the less it sounds like a Santur. Indian dulcimers sound just like the Santur, Thai Dulcimers are in between Persian Dulcimers and Vietnamese Dulcimers, and the Vietnamese Dulcimer and the Chinese Dulcimer sounds nothing like the Santur

    • @sumasian3911
      @sumasian3911 10 лет назад +1

      if you do some research, the yangqin was around first i think. it probably spread to persia by trade a while ago and became popular

    • @sumasian3911
      @sumasian3911 9 лет назад

      interesting! thanks!

    • @DarkKnight-w4x
      @DarkKnight-w4x 8 лет назад +1

      You're right! Santur was spread to China around The Ming Dynasty(1368-1644) and became Yangqin. They sound alike but tuning differently though.

  • @aly6082
    @aly6082 6 лет назад

    CAMILA TE AMO UWU

  • @tessberthelot6027
    @tessberthelot6027 5 лет назад

    zen

  • @CaptainDiscount
    @CaptainDiscount 15 лет назад

    A wise musician once told me that my farts were messages from Elvis

  • @RizwanKhan-os1pt
    @RizwanKhan-os1pt 5 лет назад

    Xièxiè

  • @4blossoms
    @4blossoms 12 лет назад +7

    Please don't use the words "wise", "sage" or "ancestral". Tired of hearing Chinese culture constantly stereotyped. Believe you me, most Chinese like myself are not much wiser than anyone else!

  • @behnambehnam
    @behnambehnam 12 лет назад

    and this one is from iran b9cZzCdT2M4

  • @behnambehnam
    @behnambehnam 12 лет назад

    iranien santoor cwrRpXWKUWg

  • @vicakuechle604
    @vicakuechle604 11 лет назад

    I didn't like that