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Qinpu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Front cover of the first folio of the facsimile of Qinxue Congshu

Qinpu(simplified Chinese:Cầm phổ;traditional Chinese:Cầm phổ;pinyin:qínpǔ;Jyutping:kam4pou2) aretablaturescorecollections for theguqin,a Chinese musical instrument.

Description

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Qinpu are collections of tablatures of music for the guqin. In the past, music was passed on from teacher to student. Only recently has tablature been written down, often to preserve music or as a reference book.[citation needed]Tablature comes in form of individual pieces and collections. Collections often have explanations for fingering, background information, musical analyses, and other additional information attached to them.

Different types of qinpu

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There are several different types of qinpu one can obtain.

  • Original editionsare qinpu printed at the original time of publication, or re-issues during the past. These are mostly kept in libraries and private collections. Since they are original, they tend to be fragile.
  • Photographic reprintsis basically a scan of the original qinpu and reduced size reprint in modern binding. The most famous is theQinqu Jicheng.
  • Lithographic facsimilesare becoming more popular. The original qinpu is scanned, then it is lithographically printed on xuan paper. They are bound intraditional Chinese book bindingmethod.
  • Modern reset editionsappeared after 2005. These have modern typographic elements and are often reset using more recent editions or handcopies of original qinpu.

See also

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References

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Please see:References section in the guqin articlefor a full list of references used in all qin related articles.
  • Zha, Fuxi (1958).Cunjian Guqin Qupu Jilan【 tồn kiến cổ cầm khúc phổ tập lãm 】. Beijing: The People's Music Press.ISBN7-103-02379-4.
  • Christopher Evan's siteZha Fuxi's list of tablature collections inpinyin alphabetical order.
  • John Thompson: Guqin HandbooksA chronological list with more detailed listing and links.