Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - The less information about Tibetan opera, the better! ! ! ! !

The less information about Tibetan opera, the better! ! ! ! !

Tibetan opera is called "Ajram" or "ram", which means "sister fairy" or "fairy". Tibetan opera is a comprehensive art that is popular in Tibetan areas and expresses the content of stories in the form of songs and dances. People in Tibet, Sichuan, Qinghai, Yunnan and other Tibetan areas generally like to watch Tibetan operas.

Tibetan opera has been popular in Tibet for more than 600 years. According to legend, at the beginning of the 0/4th century A.D./KLOC, the late Tibetan monk Tang Dongjiebu raised funds to build the Yarlung Zangbo River Tiesuo Bridge. At first, he ran around to raise funds for bridge construction, which lasted for three years and failed. Later, in a poor county in Shannan region, he found that there were seven smart and beautiful sisters who could sing and dance among Lu Cheng's followers, so he organized them, wrote and directed musicals with simple stories according to Buddhist stories, performed them everywhere, and successfully raised funds. This is the embryonic form of Tibetan opera. In the early Tibetan opera, simple stories were performed by pantomime. After a long evolution, folk dance has developed into a comprehensive art. Modern Tibetan opera has scripts, dance performances, vocals tailored for different people, different costumes and masks for different roles, band accompaniment and backup vocals.