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Post by Si on Jul 24, 2007 12:56:10 GMT
charliecharlieecho - at first I assumed you were CCC with a different persona, just to increase the numbers of this section of the forum - hahaha. He is the lao ban of this forum afterall!
guys this is not the most easiest of tunes to understand!!, if i can get my head around it before wednesdays lesson then i will try to ask her - but although her conversational english is good, it will be difficult for her to express music theory to me.
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Post by charliecharlieecho on Jul 24, 2007 13:53:04 GMT
Nope, Ah ain't CCC, no way, no Sir!
Do you know who's version of DTQS you're learning? If you can tell us that or post a copy of the tablature here, that'll help us to say something more specific.
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Post by SCWGuqin on Jul 24, 2007 16:57:51 GMT
It's 99% likely to be Zha Fuxi's version...
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Post by Si on Jul 25, 2007 2:25:10 GMT
Its from Cheng Gong liangs book. Think its available in the internet.
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Post by charliecharlieecho on Jul 25, 2007 11:10:23 GMT
It is indeed available from CGL's web-site and the preliminary notes confirm all that SWCGuqin has written about the cenong in the peice and its provenance. The end note is interesting because it says in effect that Zha Fuxi cobbled the tablature together from four sources: parts 1 and 2 from the Song Xian Guan Qinpu and Er Xiang Qinpu, parts 3 and 4 from the Qinshu Daquan and the coda from the Xilutang Qintong. Sections 1, 3 and 4 use the 4th string as gong but section 2 and the coda use it as yu.
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Post by Charlie Huang on Aug 7, 2007 20:34:31 GMT
I know Dannong plays DTQS. I tried to learn it but the melody is so strange that is fails to stick to my memory...
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Post by SCWGuqin on Aug 7, 2007 22:29:04 GMT
ZFX's original recording is very impressive. It's a very sober, mature piece he's created. I also like the recording by Xie Xiaoping, for its weirdness of course.
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Post by Si on Aug 9, 2007 8:55:53 GMT
whos dannong? Yeah the melody is not so straight forward.
BTW - how was the summer school?
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Post by Charlie Huang on Aug 9, 2007 9:14:46 GMT
A member of the London Youlan Qin Society.
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Post by hezekiahpipstraw on Aug 15, 2007 10:00:17 GMT
I wasn't suggesting that spying on your citizens is equivalent to controlling the kinds of music they can enjoy, but that one anglophone democracy taking the more totalitarian course suggests others might see no political/moral objection to taking the lesser.
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Post by Si on Aug 15, 2007 20:00:15 GMT
what?
Its this in the wrong thread?
Sounds intersting - I heard they have spies in China (probably in each office) working for the Party. But I dont think they give a damn about pop or music.
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Post by Charlie Huang on Aug 16, 2007 7:06:15 GMT
Think it is. However, I have no way of actually moving posts...
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