Directions: Arirang, Sakura and Mo Li Hua are native folksongs originated from
Korea, Japan and China. For your activity, list three (3) Folk songs which are
the table below. Copy the table and write your answer on a separate sheet of paper.
Can Do
Activity 4
Folksong
Language
Meter
(Duple, Triple,
Quadruple)
Scale Used
(Pentatonic/
diatonic)
Tempo
(Slow,
Moderate,
Fast)
1.
2.
3.
Answers
Answer:
Directions: Arirang, Sakura and Mo Li Hua are native folksongs originated from
Korea, Japan and China. For your activity, list three (3) Folk songs which are
the table below. Copy the table and write your answer on a separate sheet of paper.
Can Do
Activity 4
Folksong
Language
Meter
(Duple, Triple,
Quadruple)
Scale Used
(Pentatonic/
diatonic)
Tempo
(Slow,
Moderate,
Fast)
1.
2.
3.
Answer:
Arirang
"Arirang" is a traditional Korean folk song. There are approximately 3,600 variations of the song's 60 different versions, all of which include a refrain similar to "Arirang, arirang, arariyo. The song is thought to be over 600 years old.
- "Arirang" is listed twice on the UNESCO list of Intangible Cultural Heritage. In 2012, South Korea successfully applied for the song's inclusion on the UNESCO list. In 2014, North Korea successfully submitted the song for inclusion. The song was added to the South Korean Cultural Heritage Administration's list of important intangible cultural assets in 2015.
- A medley of versions of "Arirang" were performed by a Western classical music orchestra and a variety of traditional Korean musical instruments, including the 12-stringed zither, or gayageum, the cylindrical double-reed bamboo oboe, or piri, and the free-reed mouth organ made of 17 bamboo pipes, at the concert.
- The rhythmic pattern (jangdan) used in Arirang has three compound beats in a moderate tempo, called semachi, which provides the overall rhythmic framework.
Sakura (Song of cherry blossoms)
It's no surprise that a culture based on the calm and collected psychologies of Shinto and Zen would notice, write a song about it, and honour that song for centuries on a traditional instrument like the Koto. The koto is a traditional Japanese stringed instrument that is similar to a lap steel guitar.
Just for the sake of saying it, the Japanese also have a stringed instrument more like an acoustic guitar called the shamisen.
Mo Li Hua(Song of jasmine flowers)
"Mo Li Hua” uses a pentatonic scale, which is made up of five notes. The pentatonic scale is often found in Chinese Traditional music, making up the signature sound heard in this repertoire.
- The pulsing dynamics contribute to the piece's slow tempo. Jasmine Flower begins with high eerie chords sung by the choir in four-part harmony (soprano, alto, tenor, and base), which begin loud and strong and gradually fade into the ground as the solo enters with the melody.
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