Leiqin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leiqin
Classification

Related instruments

The leiqin (雷琴, literally "thunderous instrument"; also called leihu) is a Chinese bowed string musical instrument.

Construction

It has a metal soundbox covered with snakeskin and a long fretless fingerboard. The two strings pass over a small bridge that is placed on the snakeskin, near the top edge.

Playing technique

The leiqin is played while the player is seated in a chair, with the instrument's body resting in his or her lap and held in a vertical or near-vertical position. Unlike the erhu and other instruments in the huqin family, the strings are pressed against the fingerboard in the manner of a sanxian.

History

The leiqin was adapted from an earlier traditionl instrument called zhuihu in the 1920s.

See also

  • Zhuihu
  • Huqin
  • Music of China
  • Traditional Chinese musical instruments
  • String instruments

External links

Audio

  • Leiqin MP3s (click on headphones to listen to individual tracks)

Video

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.