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Melody generic term used in traditional Chinese music
A qupai (Chinese: 曲牌; pinyin: qǔpái; also called Chinese: 牌子; pinyin: paizi) is the generic term for a fixed melody used in traditional Chinese music
Qupai
Branch of Chinese opera
the music is southern or northern. Kunqu qupai music can be divided into vocal qupai and instrumental qupai according to its different uses. Kunqu opera
Kunqu
City in Fujian, China
opera) and choudan (comic role) opera, according to the repertoire. Its qupai (the names of the tunes) belongs to nanyin, an ancient music style from
Xiamen
structure combines suites of traditional qupai melodies with natural, conversational spoken passages. The use of qupai follows the structural conventions inherited
The Tale of Lady Golden Flower
The_Tale_of_Lady_Golden_Flower
Chinese music genre
Yuan Empire. Baisha xiyue is a classical orchestral musical form, with 24 qupai (tunes), played on antique Chinese musical instruments, such as flute, shawm
Baisha_xiyue
Type of Chinese opera
percussion section utilizes large gongs and drums, which punctuate the qupai (melodic tunes) to closely integrate the backing vocals, acting, and singing
Sichuan_opera
Music genre
innovations in styles of musical composition such as the cipai and the qupai. Fanbai and Buddhist music remain an important part of the practice of contemporary
Buddhist_music
Chinese opera style
second type of melody heard in Peking opera is the fixed-tune melody, or qupai. These are instrumental tunes that serve a wider range of purposes than
Peking_opera
music consists of a repertoire of traditional melodies, together known as qupai, in which tempo and ornamentation vary according to the mood of the instrumentalist
Music_of_China
Chinese Buddhist style of ritual chanting
various cipai (the name of the tune to which a ci poem is composed) and qupai (fixed melody used in traditional Chinese instrumental or vocal music) compositions
Fanbai
basha xiyue is performed by orchestras. There are 24 simple, energetic qupai (tunes) in use. Dongjing uses a type of traditional musical notation called
Music_of_Yunnan
Named tune-title and metrical pattern used in Chinese ci poetry
jishi you is the opening phrase. Well-known cipai include: Ci (poetry) Qupai Classical Chinese poetry forms Song poetry Sanqu "ci". Encyclopaedia Britannica
Cipai
these pieces resembles a suite (taoqu) of variations upon a stock melody (qupai or "noted tune"). These are called ban or "beat" variations and follow an
Music_of_southern_China
Influence of Chinese culture on Korean culture
ISBN 978-0-521-22400-0. Provine 1987 : 10. Provine 1987 : 9–10. Thrasher, Alan R (2016). Qupai in Chinese Music: Melodic Models in Form and Practice. Taylor & Francis
Chinese influence on Korean culture
Chinese_influence_on_Korean_culture
Music genre
these pieces resembles a suite (taoqu) of variations upon a stock melody (qupai or 'noted tune'). These are called ban or 'beat' variations and follow an
Teochew_string_music
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Female
African
we are given.
Girl/Female
Indian, Tamil, Telugu
God; Life; Soul; It can also be a Honorific Used as a Suffix and is Gender Neutral
Boy/Male
Indian
Fine
Girl/Female
British, English, Welsh
Elf Power; Holy Peacemaking
Boy/Male
Hindu
Best wishes, Offering to God
Girl/Female
Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Muslim, Pashtun, Sindhi
Blooming; Flourishing; Happy
Male
Egyptian
, an Egyptian gentleman of the XIIth dynasty.
Boy/Male
English
Steward.
Girl/Female
Teutonic
Renowned holiness.
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu
Lord Krishna
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