First, Liangzhou Ci
(Tang)
Wine luminous glass,
If you want to drink pipa, hurry up.
Don't laugh when you are drunk on the beach.
How many wars were fought in ancient times?
Second, a brief introduction of Liangzhou Ci
Liangzhou Ci, also known as Liangzhou Song, is the lyrics written by dignitaries and imperial clan celebrities for Liangzhou Song, which is a popular qupai in Tang Dynasty. Liangzhou (now Wuwei City, Gansu Province) is named because it is located in the northwest and often cold.
Liangzhou is the first song of the national Yuefu in the Tang Dynasty: it was composed by Guo Zhiyun in the ninth year of Kaiyuan, belonging to Hu Department: it is a Daqu with style, Taoism and mode; The music style is sad and sad.
Musical instruments include pipa, Hu Jia, Qiangdi, Zheng, Hengdi, Sheng and Fangxiang. Dance, which belongs to soft dance; There are many singers, dancers and performers; Many famous poets wrote lyrics for it; Songs enter Yuefu through the way that artists choose poems to enter music; It is also a symbol for future generations to recall the prosperous Tang Dynasty.
Artistic value and appreciation of works
First, artistic value.
Liangzhou in Tang poetry is rich in content and sincere in emotion, describing the suffering of war and expressing patriotic feelings; Expressing strong homesickness and homesickness; Describe the natural scenery of foreign border areas; Some show Liangzhou's unique exotic culture, among which the exotic culture mainly describes Liangzhou's customs, music and dance, Buddhism and so on.
Liangzhou Ci is rich in content and an important part of frontier fortress culture. The style of Liangzhou poetry in Tang Dynasty is desolate and vigorous, mighty and heroic, peaceful and natural. Different artistic styles reflect the poet's different emotions and enrich the emotional connotation and historical sense of Liangzhou poetry.
Second, the appreciation of works
Liangzhou (now Wuwei City, Gansu Province) is a big stage for China's frontier poems. Frontier poems are a wonderful flower in China's poems, especially in the Tang Dynasty, which is the essence of China's poems.
Poets in Tang Dynasty wrote frontier poems, especially Cen Can, Gao Shi, Wang Zhihuan, William Wang, Wang Changling, Li Yi and Yuan Zhen, and their frontier poems were mostly related to Liangzhou. In addition, Luo, Li Bai, Wang Wei, Meng Haoran, Wang Jian and others also wrote some frontier poems related to Liangzhou.