Stroke order of flute characters
First of all, the stroke order
The number of strokes of the flute is 1 1, the pinyin is dí, the radical is bamboo, the structure is up and down, the stroke order is ノノフ, and the pen names are left, horizontal, dot, left and horizontal.
Second, expand knowledge.
1, flute
The flute is the oldest Han musical instrument discovered so far, and it is also the most representative and national musical instrument among Han musical instruments. China bamboo flute is one of the woodwind instruments commonly used in China traditional music, which is generally divided into Qu Di in the south, Bangdi in the north and alto flute in the middle. Generally, the range can reach more than two octaves.
Flute is often used in China folk music, China national orchestra, western symphony orchestra and modern music, and it is one of the representative musical instruments in China. In the national band, the flute is an important instrument to play bagpipes and is regarded as the representative of national bagpipes music. Most flutes are made of bamboo, but there are also flutes made of stone flutes, Yu Di and mahogany, as well as ancient bone flutes. But bamboo is still the best raw material for making flutes, because bamboo flutes have better sound effects and lower production costs.
2. The historical evolution of flute.
China flute has a long history, which can be traced back to the Neolithic Age. At that time, the ancestors lit bonfires, set up prey, sang and danced around the captured prey while eating, and played by drilling holes in the tibia of birds (trapping prey and transmitting signals with sound), thus giving birth to the oldest musical instrument unearthed in China-bone flute.
The flute was called "Qi" in ancient times. Xu Shen's Shuo Wen Jie Zi in Han Dynasty recorded: "flute, seven holes, bamboo flute".
During the Sui and Tang Dynasties, both the "big cross-blowing part" and the "small cross-blowing part" of drum music used cross-blowing flute. In the "Le Yan" music for people to enjoy and entertain in the Sui and Tang Dynasties, the flute (then called Liu Heng) was widely active in the band, and it can also be seen in Dunhuang murals in the Sui Dynasty and musicians' pictures in the Tang Dynasty. In other historical pictures, we will also find flute playing postures in two directions.
In the Tang Dynasty, there were records about famous flute players, such as Li Mo, Sun Chuxiu, You Chengen and Yun. Among them, Li Mo, a musician from Qiuci in the Western Regions, was praised as "the best in the world" in the Kaiyuan period because of his excellent flute performance and excellent skills.
There are various flute systems in Song Dynasty, including fork flute, dragon neck flute, eleven-hole small transverse flute, nine-hole big transverse flute and seven-hole rain flute. With the rise of Song Ci and Yuan Qu and the vigorous development of traditional operas, dizi has become an accompaniment instrument for many operas, which can be divided into two categories: bangdi and Qu Di. Flute is also an indispensable instrument in folk opera bands.