Yunluo
The yunluo (simplified:
Traditional yunluo
[edit]The yunluo is a set of usually ten small tuned gongs mounted in a wooden frame, with each gong being about 9-12 cm in diameter, and the height of the frame being about 52 cm. The yunluo's gongs are generally of equal diameter but different thicknesses; the thicker gongs produce a higher pitch. It is often used in wind and percussion ensembles in northern China. Old drawings also depict a smaller yunluo with just five gongs, which was held by a handle by one hand and played with the other.
The traditional yunluo is sometimes referred to as the shimianluo (
Modernized yunluo
[edit]A modernized yunluo has been developed from the traditional yunluo for use in the large modern Chinese orchestra. It is much larger with 29 or more gongs of different diameters. Its height may be over 2m including its two legs on which it stands on the floor (the frame itself is about half its height); its width is about 1.4 m or wider.
In other countries
[edit]A very similar instrument called the ulla (hangul: 운라; hanja:
The nhã nhạc music of Vietnam uses a similar instrument with three gongs, called the tam âm la (Sino-Vietnamese:
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Yunluo ("Cloud Gong")". The Met.
- ^ "Percussion Instruments". Nusco. Archived from the original on August 7, 2003.
- ^ "운라 - 문화콘텐츠닷컴". www.culturecontent.com. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
- ^ "운라(
雲 鑼) - 한국민족문화대백과사전". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 2021-06-02.
External links
[edit]- Photo and description of yunluo (the picture is of a traditional yunluo)
- Yunluo and shimianluo
Video
[edit]- Video of an 18-gong yunluo, from The Musical Instruments E-book