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Mangtong

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Introduction to Traditional Chinese Musical Instruments

Introduction to Traditional Chinese Musical Instruments
Historical records indicate that there used to be 1,000 or so musical instruments in use in...

The Bronze Drum

The Bronze Drum
The bronze drum is not covered with skin but made entirely of hollowed bronze, and it is the most...

Pipa

Pipa
The term pipa has been known since the third century B.C. It originally described the playing...

The mangtong (芒筒; pinyin: mángtǒng) is a Chinese end-blown free reed wind instrument. It is used primarily by the Miao and Dong ethnic groups of the southern Chinese provinces of Guizhou and Guangxi, although it is sometimes used in contemporary Chinese compositions for traditional instrument orchestra.

The instrument consists of a bamboo free reed pipe without finger holes, which is fitted with a metal free reed; the instrument's playing pipe is placed inside a bamboo resonator of larger diameter. The mangtong is made in several different sizes, with the largest up to two meters in length. As the mangtong produces only a single pitch, several mangtong are normally played together in hocket. Mangtong are often played together with an ensemble of free reed mouth organs called lusheng, serving as the bass instruments of that ensemble.

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