Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - What kind of music is suona solo "A Hundred Birds at the Phoenix"?

What kind of music is suona solo "A Hundred Birds at the Phoenix"?

Suona solo is a kind of folk percussion ensemble music. A Hundred Birds Facing the Phoenix is a Han folk music with suona as the main instrument. It was first popular in Henan, Shandong, Hebei, Anhui and other places. With lively and cheerful tunes, it depicts hundreds of birds and songs, gives full play to the specialty of suona imitation, shows a vibrant natural scene, and evokes people's love for nature and memories of working life. "A Hundred Birds Facing the Phoenix" is one of the top ten famous songs of China national instrumental music, and it is a traditional repertoire that appeals to both refined and popular tastes. Suona is a reed musical instrument, also known as trumpet, which consists of five parts: whistle, air disc, letter (core), pole and bowl. Suona has many kinds, wide range, rich, soft, simple, deep and full timbre, and can play an impassioned, high-pitched and euphemistic melody, with various artistic expressions such as solo, ensemble, accompaniment and concerto.