The earliest ancient piano score

At present, the earliest known guqin music is Jieshi Tiao Youlan handed down by Liang Qiuming in the Southern Dynasties.

"Jieshi Tunes the Orchid" is a famous song of China Guqin. This music score is the earliest existing music score and the only music score preserved in text music score before the invention of subtraction notation. "Stone Tunes the Orchid" is said to be written by Confucius, and it is the earliest existing guqin music score in China. The original of the existing spectrum is the handwritten paper spectrum of the Tang Dynasty.

Shen Guang Institute, located in Xihe Mao, Kyoto, Japan, still maintains the writing style of early characters. /kloc-At the end of 0/9th century, Mr. Yang Shoujing found this piano music while consulting Japanese ancient books. The whole spectrum records piano music through detailed words, such as fingering, string order and emblem position of left and right hands.

This song was written by Qiu Ming, a hermit in the Southern Liang Dynasty (AD 494-590), and it is the earliest existing piano score of figures in China. The title of the song is preceded by the title of the song, which is only seen in Qin music. It can be inferred that the content of "Youlan" should be expressed in Jieshi tone. Jieshi dance was popular in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, and Jieshi tune may be the Jieshi dance tune at that time.

There are many biographies of You Lan. According to Cao Qin, during the Spring and Autumn Period, Confucius traveled around the world, but on his way back to Shandong in self-defense, he saw orchids in full bloom in the valley, but they were mixed with weeds. He couldn't help but be moved by the scenery in front of him, and felt that he was born at a bad time, so he wrote the piano music Yi Lan.

Spectrum:

Li Shuchang's notes in Japan during the Guangxu period of Qing Dynasty were included in the Ancient One Series. It's a four-part medium-sized song. Nothing to say. Since the beginning of Ming Dynasty, this piece of music has been found in 23 kinds of printed musical scores, which are called "Yi Lan" or "Yi Lan", among which Ziyuantang musical score in Qing Dynasty is still called "Youlan".

Ming spectrum is an eleven-paragraph Daqu, which is very different from the paper version, and the spectrum of Ming and Qing dynasties is also different. 1885, Yang Shoujing, a China scholar, discovered this piano piece while consulting ancient books in Japan. Its original music score is kept in the Shen Guang Institute of Xihemao, Kyoto, and it is a manuscript of the Tang Dynasty. Handwriting is recorded by the fingering played by the left and right hands on the piano, and there are 4954 Chinese characters in * * *.