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tiehuang

Iron Reed (Pinyin: Tiě huáng), also known as mouth-holding qin, mouth-playing qin. It is made of copper or iron, and it is also made of bullet casings. The common ones are pincer-shaped, ring-shaped, sword-shaped, leaf-shaped, pear-shaped and so on. The iron fee described in the "Tongdian of the Qing Dynasty" is in the wrong shape. This kind of iron spring is more popular in the Daur and Hezhe ethnic groups in Northeast China, the Kirgiz ethnic group in Xinjiang, the Salar ethnic group in Qinghai, and the Yao ethnic group in Guangxi.

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  • Pinyin:Tiě huáng
  • alias:Harmonica
  • material:copper or iron
  • Make good use of the area:Sichuan Liangshan Yi area
history
There are many beautiful legends about iron springs from all ethnic groups. On the Sanjiang Plain of Heilongjiang Province in the northeast, there is a legend among the Hezhe people: There was a plague in a village in the past, and only a nursing child was left. Life.
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news
All ethnic minorities in our country have their own names for the iron spring.
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The iron spring of the Kirgiz nationality has a length of 6.5 cm-7 cm, a width of 2.5 cm, a height of 2.5 cm at the tip of the spring, and a slightly curved top. When playing, hold the reed frame with the left hand, place the rich end between the teeth, and put the tip of the tip out of the lips, and move the tip of the tip with the right hand to pronounce.
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