Thepipa (Chinese:琵琶;pinyin:pípá;Wade–Giles:p'i-p'a) is a traditional Chinesemusical instrument belonging to theplucked category of instruments. Sometimes called the "Chineselute", the instrument has a pear-shaped wooden body with a varying number offrets ranging from 12 to 31. Another Chinese four-string plucked lute is theliuqin, which looks like a smaller version of the pipa. The pear-shaped instrument may have existed in China as early as theHan dynasty, and although historically the termpipa was once used to refer to a variety of pluckedchordophones, its usage since theSong dynasty refers exclusively to the pear-shaped instrument.
The pipa is one of the most popular Chinese instruments and has been played for almost two thousand years in China. Several related instruments are derived from the pipa, including theJapanesebiwa andKoreanbipa inEast Asia, and theVietnameseđàn tỳ bà inSoutheast Asia. The Korean instrument is the only one of the three that is no longer widely used.
Relief sculpture fromGandhara showing a lute being played by a musician (right), 1st–2nd century AD
There are some confusions and disagreements about the origin of pipa. This may be due to the fact that the word pipa was used inancient texts to describe a variety of plucked chordophones of the period from theQin to theTang dynasty, including the long-necked spiked lute and the short-necked lute, as well as the differing accounts given in these ancient texts. Traditional Chinese narrative prefers the story of the Han Chinese PrincessLiu Xijun sent tomarry abarbarianWusun king during theHan dynasty, with thepipa being invented so she could play music on horseback to soothe her longings.[1][2] Modern researchers such asLaurence Picken,Shigeo Kishibe, and John Myers suggested a non-Chinese origin.[3][4][5]
The earliest mention of pipa in Chinese texts appeared late in theHan dynasty around the 2nd century AD.[6][7] According to Liu Xi'sEastern Han dynastyDictionary of Names, the word pipa may have anonomatopoeic origin (the word being similar to the sounds the instrument makes),[6] although modern scholarship suggests a possible derivation from thePersian word "barbat", the two theories however are not necessarily mutually exclusive.[8][9] Liu Xi also stated that the instrument calledpipa, though written differently (枇杷;pípá or批把;pībǎ) in the earliest texts, originated from amongst theHu people (a general term for non-Han people living to the north and west of ancient China).[6]
Another Han dynasty text,Fengsu Tongyi, also indicates that, at that time,pipa was a recent arrival,[7] although later 3rd-century texts from theJin dynasty suggest that pipa existed in China as early as theQin dynasty (221–206 BC).[10] An instrument calledxiantao (弦鼗), made by stretching strings over a small drum with handle, was said to have been played by labourers who constructed theGreat Wall of China during the late Qin dynasty.[10][11] This may have given rise to theQin pipa, an instrument with a straight neck and a roundsound box, and evolved intoruan, an instrument named afterRuan Xian, one of theSeven Sages of the Bamboo Grove and known for playing similar instrument.[12][13] Yet another term used in ancient text wasQinhanzi (秦漢子), perhaps similar to Qin pipa with a straight neck and a round body, but modern opinions differ on its precise form.[14][15][16]
The pear-shaped pipa is likely to have been introduced to China fromCentral Asia,Gandhara, and/or India.[2] As people traveled along theSilk Road, the "oval" or oval-shaped pipa traveled through Central Asia and was introduced to China, where it became known as the "pipa."[17]
Pear-shaped lutes have been depicted inKusana sculptures from the 1st century AD.[18][19] The pear-shaped pipa may have been introduced during theHan dynasty and was referred to as Han pipa. However, depictions of the pear-shaped pipas in China only appeared after the Han dynasty during theJin dynasty in the late 4th to early 5th century.[20] Pipa acquired a number of Chinese symbolisms during the Han dynasty - the instrument length of threefeet fiveinches represents the three realms (heaven, earth, and man) and thefive elements, while the four strings represent the four seasons.[7]
Depictions of the pear-shaped pipas appeared in abundance from theSouthern and Northern dynasties onwards, and pipas from this time to the Tang dynasty were given various names, such as Hu pipa (胡琵琶), bent-neck pipa (曲項琵琶, quxiang pipa), some of these terms however may refer to the same pipa. Apart from the four-stringed pipa, other pear-shaped instruments introduced include the five-stringed, straight-necked, wuxian pipa (五弦琵琶, also known asKuchean pipa (龜茲琵琶)),[21] a six-stringed version, as well as the two-stringed hulei (忽雷). From the 3rd century onwards, through theSui and Tang dynasty, the pear-shapedpipas became increasingly popular in China. By theSong dynasty, the word pipa was used to refer exclusively to the four-stringed pear-shaped instrument.
Lute detail from a Tang dynasty painting on silk, 897 A.D.
The pipa reached a height of popularity during theTang dynasty, and was a principal musical instrument in the imperial court. It may be played as a solo instrument or as part of the imperial orchestra for use in productions such asdaqu (大曲, grand suites), an elaborate music and dance performance.[22] During this time,Persian andKuchan performers and teachers were in demand in the capital,Chang'an (which had a large Persian community).[23] Some delicately carvedpipas with beautiful inlaid patterns date from this period, with particularly fine examples preserved in theShosoin Museum in Japan. It had close association withBuddhism and often appeared in mural and sculptural representations of musicians in Buddhist contexts.[22] One of the BuddhistFour Heavenly Kings, the EasternDhṛtarāṣṭra, is often depicted with a pipa.[24] Additionally, masses ofpipa-playingBuddhist semi-deities are depicted in the wall paintings of theMogao Caves nearDunhuang. The four and five-stringedpipas were especially popular during the Tang dynasty, and these instruments were introduced into Japan during the Tang dynasty as well as into other regions such asKorea andVietnam. The five-stringedpipa however had fallen from use by theSong dynasty, although attempts have been made to revive this instrument in the early 21st century with a modernized five-string pipa modeled on the Tang dynasty instrument.[25]
Evolution of the pipa
Tang dynasty pipa
15th century pipa
Illustrations from the 15th century Korean workAkhak Gwebeom showing a Tang-stylepipa (then still played in Korea but with extra frets added not found in the Tang dynastypipa), and aJoseon dynasty folkpipa (reflecting Ming-stylepipa) with a longer neck and more frets. Tangpipa was played with a plectrum, but the Mingpipa was played with fingers.
During the Song dynasty,pipa fell from favour at the imperial court, perhaps a result of the influence ofneo-Confuciannativism aspipa had foreign associations.[26] However, it continued to be played as afolk instrument that also gained the interest of the literati.[22] Thepipa underwent a number of changes over the centuries.
By theMing dynasty, fingers replacedplectrum as the popular technique for playing pipa, although finger-playing techniques existed as early as Tang.[27] Extrafrets were added; the early instrument had 4 frets (相,xiāng) on the neck, but during the early Ming dynasty extra bamboo frets (品, pǐn) were affixed onto thesoundboard, increasing the number of frets to around 10 and therefore the range of the instrument. The short neck of the Tangpipa also became more elongated.[26]
In the subsequent periods, the number of frets gradually increased,[28] from around 10 to 14 or 16 during the Qing dynasty, then to 19, 24, 29, and 30 in the 20th century. The 4 wedge-shaped frets on the neck became 6 during the 20th century.
The 14- or 16-fretpipa had frets arranged in approximately equivalent to the westerntone andsemitone, starting at thenut, theintervals wereT-S-S-S-T-S-S-S-T-T-3/4-3/4-T-T-3/4-3/4. Some frets produced a3/4 tone or "neutral tone". In the 1920s and 1930s, the number of frets was increased to 24, based on the 12 toneequal temperament scale, with all the intervals being semitones.[29] The traditional 16-fretpipa became less common, although it is still used in some regional styles such as the pipa in the southern genre ofnanguan/nanyin. The horizontal playing position became the vertical (or near-vertical) position by the Qing dynasty, although in some regional genres such as nanguan the pipa is still held guitar fashion.
During the 1950s, the use of metal strings in place of the traditional silk ones also resulted in a change in the sound of the pipa which became brighter and stronger.[2]
Early literary tradition in China, for example in a 3rd-century description byFu Xuan,Ode to Pipa,[1][30] associates the Han pipa with the northern frontier,Wang Zhaojun and other princesses who weremarried to nomad rulers of theWusun andXiongnu peoples in what is nowMongolia, northernXinjiang andKazakhstan.[2][31] Wang Zhaojun in particular is frequently referenced with pipa in later literary works and lyrics, for exampleMa Zhiyuan's playAutumn in the Palace of Han(漢宮秋), especially since the Song dynasty (although her story is often conflated with other women including Liu Xijun),[32][31] as well as in music pieces such asZhaojun's Lament (昭君怨, also the title of a poem), and in paintings where she is often depicted holding a pipa.[31]
There are many references to pipa in Tang literary works, for example, inA Music Conservatory Miscellany Duan Anjie related many anecdotes associated with pipa.[33] Thepipa is mentioned frequently in theTang dynasty poetry, where it is often praised for its expressiveness, refinement and delicacy of tone, with poems dedicated to well-known players describing their performances.[34][35][36] A famous poem byBai Juyi, "Pipa xing" (琵琶行), contains a description of a pipa performance during a chance encounter with a female pipa player on theYangtze River:[37]
大絃嘈嘈如急雨 小絃切切如私語 嘈嘈切切錯雜彈 大珠小珠落玉盤
Translation:
Thick strings clatter like splattering rain, Fine strings murmur like whispered words, Clattering and murmuring, meshing jumbled sounds, Like pearls, big and small, falling on a platter of jade.
The encounter also inspired a poem byYuan Zhen,Song of Pipa (琵琶歌). Another excerpt of figurative descriptions of a pipa music may be found in a eulogy for a pipa player,Lament for Shancai byLi Shen:[35]
銜花金鳳當承撥 轉腕攏弦促揮抹 花翻鳳嘯天上來 裴回滿殿飛春雪
Translation:
On the plectrum, figure of a golden phoenix with flowers in its beak, With turned wrist, he gathered the strings to pluck and strum faster. The flowers fluttered, and from Heaven the phoenix trilled, Lingering, filling the palace hall, spring snow flew.
During the Song dynasty, many of theliterati and poets wroteci verses, a form of poetry meant to be sung and accompanied by instruments such aspipa. They includedOuyang Xiu,Wang Anshi, andSu Shi. During theYuan dynasty, the playwrightGao Ming wrote a play fornanxi opera calledPipa ji (琵琶記, or "Story of the Pipa"), a tale about an abandoned wife who set out to find her husband, surviving by playing thepipa. It is one of the most enduring works in Chinese theatre, and one that became a model forMing dynasty drama as it was the favorite opera of thefirst Ming emperor.[38][39] The Ming collection of supernatural talesFengshen Yanyi tells the story ofPipa Jing, a pipa spirit, but ghost stories involvingpipa existed as early as the Jin dynasty, for example in the 4th century collection of talesSoushen Ji. Novels of the Ming and Qing dynasties such asJin Ping Mei showedpipa performance to be a normal aspect of life in these periods at home (where the characters in the novels may be proficient in the instrument) as well as outside on the street or in pleasure houses.[26]
The name "pipa" is made up of two Chinese syllables, "pí" (琵) and "pá" (琶). These, according to the Han dynasty text by Liu Xi, refer to the way the instrument is played – "pí" is to strike outward with the right hand, and "pá" is to pluck inward towards the palm of the hand.[6] The strings were played using a largeplectrum in theTang dynasty, a technique still used now for the Japanesebiwa.[40] It has however been suggested that the long plectrum depicted in ancient paintings may have been used as a friction stick like a bow.[41] The plectrum has now been largely replaced by the fingernails of the right hand. The most basic technique,tantiao (彈挑), involves just the index finger and thumb (tan is striking with the index finger,tiao with the thumb). The fingers normally strike the strings of pipa in the opposite direction to the way aguitar is usually played, i.e. the fingers and thumb flick outward, unlike the guitar where the fingers and thumb normally pluck inward towards the palm of the hand. Plucking in the opposite direction totan andtiao are calledmo (抹) andgou (勾) respectively. When two strings are plucked at the same time with the index finger and thumb (i.e. the finger and thumb separate in one action), it is calledfen (分), the reverse motion is calledzhi (摭). A rapid strum is calledsao (掃), and strumming in the reverse direction is calledfu (拂). A distinctive sound of pipa is thetremolo produced by thelunzhi (輪指) technique which involves all the fingers and thumb of the right hand. It is however possible to produce the tremolo with just one or more fingers.
A mural from the tomb of Xu Xianxiu inTaiyuan,Shanxi province, dated 571 CE during theNorthern Qi dynasty, showing male court musicians playing the pipa andliuqin, and a woman playing akonghou
The left hand techniques are important for the expressiveness of pipa music. Techniques that producevibrato,portamento,glissando,pizzicato,harmonics orartificial harmonics found in violin or guitar are also found in pipa.String-bending for example may be used to produce a glissando or portamento. Note however that the frets on all Chinese lutes are high so that the fingers and strings never touch the fingerboard in between the frets, this is different from many Western fretted instruments and allows for dramatic vibrato and other pitch changing effects.
In addition, there are a number of techniques that produce sound effects rather than musical notes, for example, striking the board of the pipa for a percussive sound, or strings-twisting while playing that produces acymbal-like effect.
The strings are usually tuned toA2D3E3A3 , although there are various other ways of tuning. Since the revolutions in Chinese instrument-making during the 20th century, the softer twisted silk strings of earlier times have been exchanged for nylon-wound steel strings, which are far too strong for human fingernails, so false nails are now used, constructed of plastic or tortoise-shell, and affixed to the fingertips with the player's choice of elastic tape. However, false nails made of horn existed as early as the Ming period when finger-picking became the popular technique for playing pipa.[26]
The pipa is held in a vertical or near-vertical position during performance, although in the early periods the instrument was held in the horizontal position or near-horizontal with the neck pointing slightly downwards, or upside down.[18][14] Starting about the 10th century, players began to hold the instrument "more upright", as the fingernail style became more important.[42] Through time, the neck was raised and by the Qing dynasty the instrument was mostly played upright.
Half-section of theNight Revels of Han Xizai, a 12th century reproduction of a 10th century painting byGu Hongzhong. One lady is seen entertaining guests with apipa and another lady is seen holding onto one.
Pipa has been played solo, or as part of a large ensemble or small group since the early times. Few pieces for pipa survived from the early periods, some, however, are preserved in Japan as part oftogaku (Tang music) tradition. In the early 20th century, twenty-five pieces were found amongst 10th-century manuscripts in theMogao caves nearDunhuang, most of these pieces however may have originated from the Tang dynasty. The scores were written intablature form with no information on tuning given, there are therefore uncertainties in the reconstruction of the music as well as the decipherment of other symbols in the score.[43] Three Ming dynasty pieces were discovered in theHigh River Flows East (高河江東,Gaohe Jiangdong) collection dating from 1528 and they are very similar to those performed today, such as "The Moon on High" (月兒高,Yue-er Gao). During theQing dynasty, scores for pipa were collected inThirteen Pieces for Strings.[44] During the Qing dynasty there were originally two major schools ofpipa—the Northern and Southern schools, and music scores for these two traditions were collected and published in the first mass-produced edition of solo pieces for pipa, now commonly known as theHua Collection (華氏譜).[45] The collection was edited by Hua Qiuping (華秋萍, 1784–1859) and published in 1819 in three volumes.[46] The first volume contains 13 pieces from the Northern school, the second and third volumes contain 54 pieces from the Southern school. Famous pieces such as "Ambushed from Ten Sides", "The Warlord Takes Off His Armour", and "Flute and Drum at Sunset" were first described in this collection. The earliest-known piece in the collection may be "Eagle Seizing a Crane" (海青挐鶴) which was mentioned in aYuan dynasty text.[47] Other collections from the Qing dynasty were compiled by Li Fangyuan (李芳園) and Ju Shilin (鞠士林), each representing different schools, and many of the pieces currently popular were described in these Qing collections. Further important collections were published in the 20th century.
The pipa pieces in the common repertoire can be categorized aswen (文, civil) orwu (武, martial), andda (大, large or suite) orxiao (小, small). Thewen style is more lyrical and slower in tempo, with softer dynamic and subtler colour, and such pieces typically describe love, sorrow, and scenes of nature. Pieces in thewu style are generally more rhythmic and faster, and often depict scenes of battles and are played in a vigorous fashion employing a variety of techniques and sound effects. Thewu style was associated more with the Northern school while thewen style was more the Southern school. Theda andxiao categories refer to the size of the piece –xiao pieces are small pieces normally containing only one section, whileda pieces are large and usually contain multiple sections. The traditional pieces however often have a standard metrical length of 68 measures or beat,[48] and these may be joined to form the larger piecesdagu.[49]
Most of the above are traditional compositions dating to the Qing dynasty or early 20th century, new pieces however are constantly being composed, and most of them follow a more Western structure. Examples of popular modern works composed after the 1950s are "Dance of the Yi People" and "Heroic Little Sisters of the Grassland" (草原英雄小姐妹). Non-traditional themes may be used in these new compositions and some may reflect the political landscape and demands at the time of composition, for example "Dance of the Yi People" which is based on traditional melodies of theYi people, may be seen as part of the drive for national unity, while "Heroic Little Sisters of the Grassland" extols the virtue of those who served as model of exemplary behaviour in thePeople's commune.[50]
Scene from a Ming dynasty painting,Tao Gu Presents a Poem, c. 1515, byTang Yin.
There are a number of different traditions with different styles of playing pipa in various regions of China, some of which then developed into schools. In the narrative traditions where the pipa is used as an accompaniment to narrative singing, there are the Suzhoutanci (蘇州彈詞), Sichuanqingyin (四川清音), and Northernquyi (北方曲藝) genres. Pipa is also an important component of regional chamber ensemble traditions such asJiangnan sizhu,Teochew string music andNanguan ensemble.[51] In Nanguan music, the pipa is still held in the near-horizontal position or guitar-fashion in the ancient manner instead of the vertical position normally used for solo playing in the present day.
There were originally two major schools of pipa during the Qing dynasty—the Northern (Zhili,直隸派) and Southern (Zhejiang,浙江派) schools—and from these emerged the five main schools associated with the solo tradition. Each school is associated with one or more collections of pipa music and named after its place of origin:
A page of music notation from the Li Collection by Li Fangyuan.
Wuxi school (無錫派) – associated with theHua Collection by Hua Qiuping, who studied with Wang Junxi (王君錫) of the Northern school and Chen Mufu (陳牧夫) of the Southern school, and may be considered a synthesis of these two schools of the Qing dynasty.[45] As the first published collection, theHua Collection had considerable influence on later pipa players.
Pudong school (浦東派) – associated with theJu Collection (鞠氏譜) which is based on an 18th-century handwritten manuscript,Xianxu Youyin (閑敘幽音), by Ju Shilin.
Pinghu school (平湖派) – associated with theLi Collection (李氏譜) first published in 1895; it was compiled by Li Fangyuan who came from a family of many generations ofpipa players.[52]
Chongming school (崇明派) – associated withOld Melodies of Yingzhou (瀛洲古調) compiled by Shen Zhaozhou (沈肇州, 1859–1930) in 1916.
Shanghai or Wang school (汪派) – named after Wang Yuting (汪昱庭) who created this style of playing. It may be considered a synthesis of the other four schools especially the Pudong and Pinghu schools. Wang did not publish his notation book in his lifetime, although handwritten copies were passed on to his students.
These schools of the solo tradition emerged by students learning to play the pipa from their master, and each school has its own style, performance aesthetics, notation system, and may differ in their playing techniques.[53][54] Different schools have different repertoire in their music collection, and even though these schools share many of the same pieces in their repertoire, a same piece of music from the different schools may differ in their content. For example, a piece like "The Warlord Takes off His Armour" is made up of many sections, some of themmetered and some withfree meter, and greater freedom in interpretation is possible in the free meter sections. Different schools however can have sections added or removed, and may differ in the number of sections with free meter.[53] The music collections from the 19th century also used thegongche notation which provides only a skeletal melody and approximate rhythms sometimes with the occasional playing instructions given (such as tremolo or string-bending), and how this basic framework can become fully fleshed out during a performance may only be learnt by the students from the master. The same piece of music can therefore differ significantly when performed by students of different schools, with striking differences in interpretation,phrasing,tempo,dynamics, playing techniques, andornamentations.
In more recent times, many pipa players, especially the younger ones, no longer identify themselves with any specific school. Modern notation systems, new compositions as well as recordings are now widely available and it is no longer crucial for a pipa players to learn from the master of any particular school to know how to play a score.
Pipa is commonly associated with Princess Liu Xijun and Wang Zhaojun of the Han dynasty, although the form of pipa they played in that period is unlikely to be pear-shaped as they are now usually depicted. Other early known players ofpipa include GeneralXie Shang from the Jin dynasty who was described to have performed it with his leg raised on tiptoe.[55] The introduction of pipa from Central Asia also brought with it virtuoso performers from that region, for example Sujiva (蘇祇婆,Sujipo) from the Kingdom ofKucha during theNorthern Zhou dynasty, Kang Kunlun (康崑崙) fromKangju, and Pei Luoer (裴洛兒) fromShule. Pei Luoer was known for pioneering finger-playing techniques,[27] while Sujiva was noted for the "Seven modes and seven tones", amusical modal theory from India.[56][57] (Theheptatonic scale was used for a time afterwards in the imperial court due to Sujiva's influence until it was later abandoned). These players had considerable influence on the development ofpipa playing in China. Of particular fame were the family ofpipa players founded by Cao Poluomen (曹婆羅門) and who were active for many generations from theNorthern Wei to Tang dynasty.[58]
Texts from Tang dynasty mentioned many renowned pipa players such as He Huaizhi (賀懷智), Lei Haiqing (雷海清), Li Guaner (李管兒), and Pei Xingnu (裴興奴).[36][59][60] Duan Anjie described the duel between the famous pipa player Kang Kunlun and the monk Duan Shanben (段善本) who was disguised as a girl, and told the story of Yang Zhi (楊志) who learned how to play the pipa secretly by listening to his aunt playing at night.[33] Celebrated performers of the Tang dynasty included three generations of the Cao family—Cao Bao (曹保), Cao Shancai (曹善才) and Cao Gang (曹剛),[61][62] whose performances were noted in literary works.[63][35]
During the Song dynasty, players mentioned in literary texts include Du Bin (杜彬).[64] From the Ming dynasty, famous pipa players include Zhong Xiuzhi (鍾秀之), Zhang Xiong (張雄, known for his playing of "Eagle Seizing Swan"), the blind Li Jinlou (李近樓), and Tang Yingzeng (湯應曾) who was known to have played a piece that may be an early version of "Ambushed from Ten Sides".[65]
During the Qing dynasty, apart from those of the various schools previously mentioned, there was Chen Zijing (陳子敬), a student of Ju Shilin and known as a noted player during the late Qing dynasty.
In the 20th century, two of the most prominentpipa players were Sun Yude (孙裕德; 1904–1981) and Li Tingsong (李廷松; 1906–1976). Both were pupils of Wang Yuting (1872–1951), and both were active in establishing and promotingGuoyue ("national music"), which is a combination of traditional regional music and Western musical practices. Sun performed in the United States, Asia, and Europe, and in 1956 became deputy director of theShanghai Chinese Orchestra. As well as being one of the leading pipa players of his generation, Li held many academic positions and also carried out research on pipa scales and temperament.Wei Zhongle (卫仲乐; 1908-1997) played many instruments, including theguqin. In the early 1950s, he founded the traditional instruments department at theShanghai Conservatory of Music. Players from the Wang and Pudong schools were the most active in performance and recording during the 20th century, less active was the Pinghu school whose players include Fan Boyan (樊伯炎). Other noted players of the early 20th century includeLiu Tianhua, a student of Shen Zhaozhou of the Chongming school and who increased the number of frets on thepipa and changed to anequal-tempered tuning, and the blind playerAbing from Wuxi.
Lin Shicheng (林石城; 1922–2006), born in Shanghai, began learning music under his father and was taught by Shen Haochu (沈浩初; 1899–1953), a leading player in the Pudong school style of pipa playing. He also qualified as a doctor of Chinese medicine. In 1956, after working for some years in Shanghai, Lin accepted a position at theCentral Conservatory of Music in Beijing.Liu Dehai (1937–2020), also born in Shanghai, was a student of Lin Shicheng and in 1961 graduated from the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing. Liu also studied with other musicians and has developed a style that combines elements from several different schools. Ye Xuran (叶绪然), a student of Lin Shicheng and Wei Zhongle, was the Pipa Professor at the first Musical Conservatory of China, theShanghai Conservatory of Music. He premiered the oldest Dunhuang Pipa Manuscript (the first interpretation made by Ye Dong) in Shanghai in the early 1980s.
Other prominent students of Lin Shicheng at theCentral Conservatory of Music in Beijing include Liu Guilian (刘桂莲, born 1961),Gao Hong andWu Man. Wu Man, probably the best knownpipa player internationally, received the first-ever master's degree in pipa and won China's first National Academic Competition for Chinese Instruments. She lives inSan Diego,California and works extensively with Chinese, cross-cultural, new music, and jazz groups. Shanghai-born Liu Guilian graduated from the Central Conservatory of Music and became the director of the Shanghai Pipa Society, and a member of the Chinese Musicians Association and Chinese National Orchestral Society, before immigrating to Canada. She now performs with Red Chamber and the Vancouver Chinese Music Ensemble. Gao Hong graduated from the Central Conservatory of Music and was the first to do a joint tour with Lin Shicheng in North America. They recorded the critically acclaimed CD "Eagle Seizing Swan" together.
Noted contemporary pipa players who work internationally includeMin Xiao-Fen,Zhou Yi,Qiu Xia He,Liu Fang,Cheng Yu,Jie Ma,Gao Hong,Yang Jing, Yang Wei (杨惟),[66] Yang Jin (杨瑾), Guan Yadong (管亚东), Jiang Ting (蔣婷), Tang Liangxing (湯良興),[67] and Lui Pui-Yuen (呂培原, brother ofLui Tsun-Yuen).[68] Some other notable pipa players in China include Yu Jia (俞嘉), Wu Yu Xia (吳玉霞), Fang Jinlong (方錦龍) and Zhao Cong (赵聪).
Cheng Yu researched the old Tang dynasty five-stringed pipa in the early 2000s and developed a modern version of it for contemporary use.[69] It is very much the same as the modern pipa in construction save for being a bit wider to allow for the extra string and the reintroduction of the soundholes at the front. It has not caught on in China but in Korea (where she also did some of her research) thebipa was revived since then and the current versions are based on Chinese pipa, including one with five-strings. The 5 String Pipa is tuned like a Standard Pipa with the addition of an Extra Bass String tuned to an E2 (Same as the Guitar) which broadens the range (Tuning is E2, A2, D3, E3, A3). Jiaju Shen from The Either also plays an Electric 5 String Pipa/Guitar hybrid that has the Hardware from an Electric Guitar combined with the Pipa, built by an instrument maker named Tim Sway called "Electric Pipa 2.0".
The pipa has also been used in rock music; the California-based bandIncubus featured one, borrowed from guitaristSteve Vai, in their 2001 song "Aqueous Transmission," as played by the group's guitarist,Mike Einziger.[70] The Shanghai progressive/folk-rock bandCold Fairyland, which was formed in 2001, also usepipa (played byLin Di), sometimes multi-tracking it in their recordings. Australian dark rock bandThe Eternal use thepipa in their song "Blood" as played by singer/guitaristMark Kelson on their albumKartika. The artistYang Jing playspipa with a variety of groups.[71] The instrument is also played by musicianMin Xiaofen in "I See Who You Are", a song fromBjörk's albumVolta. Western performers of pipa include French musicianDjang San, who integrated jazz and rock concepts to the instrument such aspower chords andwalking bass.[72]
The electric pipa was first developed in the late 20th century by addingelectric guitar–style magnetic pickups to a regular acoustic pipa, allowing the instrument to be amplified through aninstrument amplifier orPA system.
A number of Western pipa players have experimented with amplified pipa. Brian Grimm placed thecontact mic pickup on the face of the pipa and wedged under the bridge so he is able to plug into pedalboards, live computer performance rigs, and direct input (DI) to an audio interface for studio tracking.[73][self-published source] In 2014, French zhongruan player and composerDjang San, created his own electric pipa and recorded an experimental album that puts the electric pipa at the center of music.[74] He was also the first musician to add a strap to the instrument, as he did for the zhongruan, allowing him to play the pipa and the zhongruan like a guitar.[citation needed]
Djang San
In 2014, an industrial designer residing in the United States Xi Zheng (郑玺) designed and crafted an electric pipa – "E-pa" in New York. In 2015, pipa player Jiaju Shen (沈嘉琚) released a mini album composed and produced by Li Zong (宗立),[75] with E-pa music that has a strong Chinese flavor within a modern Western pop music mould.[citation needed]
Anapsara (feitian) playing pipa, using fingers with the pipa held in near upright position. Mural fromKizil, estimated Five Dynasties to Yuan dynasty, 10th to 13th century.[76]
Liu Dehai, pipa master, performing at the Musée Guimet
Modern pipa player, with the pipa held in near upright position
Measurement diagram of a pipa in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
^abSong Shu《宋書·樂志一》Book of Song quoting earlier work by Fu Xuan (傅玄),Ode to Pipa (琵琶賦). Original text:琵琶,傅玄《琵琶賦》曰: 漢遣烏孫公主嫁昆彌,念其行路思慕,故使工人裁箏、築,為馬上之樂。欲從方俗語,故名曰琵琶,取其易傳於外國也。 Translation: Pipa – Fu Xuan's "Ode to Pipa" says: "The Han Emperor sent the Wusun princess to marry Kunmi, and being mindful of her thoughts and longings on her journey, instructed craftsmen to modify the Chinese zitherZheng andzhu to make an instrument tailored for playing on horseback. Therefore the common use of the old term pipa came about because it was transmitted to a foreign country." (Note that this passage contains a number of assertions whose veracity has been questioned by scholars.)
^Shigeo Kishibe (1940). "The Origin of the Pipa".Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan.19:269–304.
^abcdChinese Text Project –《釋名·釋樂器》 Shiming by Liu Xi (劉熙). Original text:枇杷,本出於胡中,馬上所鼓也。推手前曰枇,引手卻曰杷。象其鼓時,因以為名也。 Translation: Pipa, originated from amongst the Hu people, who played the instrument on horseback. Striking outward with the hand is called "pi", plucking inward is called "pa", sounds like when it is played, hence the name. (This ancient way of writing pipa (枇杷) also means "loquat".)
^abc應劭 -《風俗通義·聲音》Fengsu Tongyi (Common Meanings in Customs) byYing Shao. Original text:批把: 謹按: 此近世樂家所作,不知誰也。以手批把,因以為名。長三尺五寸,法天地人與五行,四弦象四時。 Translation: Pipa, made by recent musicians, but maker unknown. Played "pi" and "pa" with the hand, it was thus named. Length of three feet five inches represents the Heaven, Earth, and Man, and the five elements, and the four strings represent the four seasons. (Note that this length of three feet five inches is equivalent to today's length of approximately two feet and seven inches or 0.8 meter.)
^ab《琵琶錄》Records of Pipa by Duan Anjie (段安節)] citing Du Zhi ofJin dynasty. Original text:樂錄雲,琵琶本出於弦鼗。而杜摯以為秦之末世,苦於長城之役。百姓弦鼗而鼓之 Translation: According to Yuelu, pipa originated fromxiantao. Du Zhi thought that towards the end of Qin dynasty, people who suffered as forced labourers on the Great Wall, played it using strings on a drum with handle. (Note that for the word xiantao, xian means string, tao meanspellet drum, one common form of this drum is a flat round drum with a handle, a form that has some resemblance to Ruan.)
^《舊唐書·音樂二》 Jiu TangshuOld Book of Tang. Original text:琵琶,四弦,漢樂也。初,秦長城之役,有鞀而鼓之者。 Translation: Pipa, four strings, comes from Han dynasty music. In the beginning, forced labourers on the Qin dynasty's Great Wall played it using a drum with handle.
^杜佑 《通典》Tongdian byDu You. Original text: 阮咸,亦秦琵琶也,而項長過於今制,列十有三柱。武太后時,蜀人蒯朗於古墓中得之,晉竹林七賢圖阮咸所彈與此類同,因謂之阮咸。}} Translation: Ruan Xian, also called Qin pipa, although its neck was longer than today's instrument. It has 13 frets. DuringEmpress Wu period, Kuailang from Sichuan found one in an ancient tomb. Ruan Xian of The Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove from the Jin dynasty was pictured playing this same kind of instrument, it was therefore named after Ruan Xian.
^ab《舊唐書·音樂二》 Jiu TangshuOld Book of Tang. Original text:今《清樂》奏琵琶,俗謂之「秦漢子」,圓體修頸而小,疑是弦鞀之遺制。其他皆充上銳下,曲項,形制稍大,疑此是漢制。兼似兩制者,謂之「秦漢」,蓋謂通用秦、漢之法。 Translation: Today's "Qingyue" performancepipa, commonly called theQinhanzi, has a round body with a small neck, and is suspected to be descended fromXiantao. The others are all shaped full on top and pointed at the bottom, neck bent, rather large, and suspected to be of Han dynasty origin. Being composite of two different constructions, it's called "Qinhan", as it is thought to use both Qin and Han methods. (Note that the description of the pear-shapedpipa as being "full on top and pointed at the bottom", an orientation that is inverted compared to modern instrument, and refers to the way pipa was often held in ancient times).
^杜佑 《通典》Tongdian byDu You citing Fu Xuan of Jin dynasty. Original text:傅玄云:「體圓柄直,柱有十二。」 Translation: Fu Xuan said: "The body is round and the handle straight, and has twelve frets."
^ab杜佑 《通典》Tongdian byDu You Original text:舊彈琵琶,皆用木撥彈之,大唐貞觀中始有手彈之法,今所謂搊琵琶者是也。《風俗通》所謂以手琵琶之,知乃非用撥之義,豈上代固有搊之者?手彈法,近代已廢,自裴洛兒始為之。 Translation: The olden ways of playing pipa all used a wooden plectrum for playing. During the reign of the Tang dynasty'sEmperor Taizong, there began the use of a finger-playing technique, which is what's called plucked pipa today. What's referred to inCommon Meanings in Customs as playingpipa by hand is thus understood to be played without plectrum, but how are we sure that there were those who played by plucking in this early period? The use of this technique has fallen away in recent times, but it was started by Pei Luoer. (Note that Pei Luoer is also known as Pei Shenfu (裴神符)).
^John Myers (1992).The way of the pipa: structure and imagery in Chinese lute music. Kent State University Press.ISBN0-87338-455-5.
^Luanjing Zayong《灤京雜詠》[permanent dead link] by Yang Yunfu (楊允孚) Original text:為愛琵琶調有情,月髙未放酒杯停,新腔翻得凉州曲彈出天鵝避海青海。 《海青挐天鵝》新聲也。 This piece is however listed as "Eagle Seizing a Swan" (海青挐天鵝) here.
^Bulag, Uradyn E. (July 1999). "Models and Moralities: The Parable of the Two "Heroic Little Sisters of the Grassland"".The China Journal.42 (42):21–41.doi:10.2307/2667639.JSTOR2667639.S2CID143684883.
^劉義慶 《世說新語》A New Account of the Tales of the World by Liu Yiqing. Original text:桓大司馬曰:「諸君莫輕道,仁祖企腳北窗下彈琵琶,故自有天際真人想。」 Translation:Grand Marshal Huan said: "Gentlemen, do not disparage Renzu, he played the pipa under the north window with his leg raised on tiptoe, and thus evoked thoughts of an immortal in heaven." (Note that Renzu (仁祖) refers to Xie Shang.)
^隋書Book of Sui. Original text:先是周武帝時,有龜茲人曰蘇祗婆,從突厥皇后入國,善胡琵琶。聽其所奏,一均之中間有七聲。因而問之,答雲:『父在西域,稱為知音。代相傳習,調有七種。』以其七調,勘校七聲,冥若合符 Translation: In the beginning, during the reign ofEmperor Wu of Northern Zhou, there was a Kuchean named Sujiva, who came into the country with theTu-jue empress and excelled in playing thehu pipa. Listening to what he played, within one scale there were seven notes. He was thus questioned about it, and he replied: "In the Western Region, my father was praised for his knowledge of music. As transmitted and practised through generations, there were seven kinds of mode." Taking his seven modes, and on investigating and comparing them with the seven notes, they fitted together and tallied well.
^《舊唐書·音樂二》 Jiu Tangshu (Old Book of Tang) Original text:後魏有曹婆羅門,受龜茲琵琶于商人,世傳其業。至孫妙達,尤為北齊高洋所重,常自擊胡鼓以和之。 Translation: DuringLater Wei there was Cao Poluomen, who was a trader in Kuchean pipa for whose craft he was famous. His grandchild Miaoda [曹妙达] in particular was highly regarded byEmperor Wenxuan of Northern Qi dynasty, who would often play thehu drum in accompaniment. (Note that Poluomen (or Bolomen) meansBrahmin or Indian.)
^Note that some people claimed Pei Xingnu to be the female player described in the poemPipa Xing, there is however no definitive proof of that claim.
^Duan Anjie –A Music Conservatory Miscellany (Yuefu zalu樂府雜錄) Original text: –貞元中有王芬、曹保,保其子善才其孫曹綱皆襲所藝。次有裴興奴,與綱同時。曹綱善運撥,若風雨,而不事扣弦,興奴長於攏撚,不撥稍軟。時人謂:「曹綱有右手,興奴有左手。」 Note that Shancai was used as a word to mean virtuoso or maestro during the Tang dynasty.
^琵琶行 (Pipa xing) Original text: –曲罷曾教善才伏,妝成每被秋娘妒。 Translation: Her art the admiration even of master Shancai, Her beauty the envy of all pretty girls.
^劉禹錫《曹剛》 Cao Gang byLiu Yuxi Original text:大弦嘈囋小弦清,噴雪含風意思生。一聽曹剛彈薄媚,人生不合出京城。
^Houshan Shihua《後山詩話》 by Chen Shidao (陳師道), relating a story aboutOuyang Xiu listening to Du Bin. Original text:故公詩雲:座中醉客誰最賢?杜彬琵琶皮作弦。自從彬死世莫傳。 Translation: So Master (Ouyang Xiu) in his poem says: "Who amongst the drunken guests in their seats was the most worthy? It's Du Bin who played the pipa with animal hide for strings. Ever since Du Bin's death such skill is lost to the world".
^《湯琵琶傳》 Original text:而尤得意於《楚漢》一曲,當其兩軍決戰時,聲動天地,瓦屋若飛墜。徐而察之,有金聲、鼓聲、劍弩聲、人馬辟易聲。俄而無聲。久之,有怨而難明者,為楚歌聲;淒而壯者,為項王悲歌慷慨之聲、別姬聲;陷大澤,有追騎聲;至烏江,有項王自刎聲、餘騎蹂踐爭項王聲。
^"Celestial Pipa Musician". Smithsonian Museum.HISTORICAL PERIOD(S) Five Dynasties to Yuan Dynasty, 10th to 13th century; MEDIUM Pigment on stucco; DIMENSIONS H x W: 38.2 x 36.2 cm (15 1/16 x 14 1/4 in); GEOGRAPHY China; CREDIT LINE Gift of Arthur M. Sackler; COLLECTION Arthur M. Sackler Gallery; ACCESSION NUMBER S1987.265