The set of bells, set of chimes and other
instruments excavated from the tomb of Zeng Houyi, who was a Warring States duke
in Suixian County (now Suizhou City in Hubei Province), are the largest-scale
ancient percussion instruments found so far. The musical instruments were
discovered in the central chamber, which was the biggest, and the second
biggest, the eastern chamber.
Among the musical instruments found was a
bell used for tuning other instruments, a ten-stringed plucked instrument, five
Se (a zither-like instrument) with 25 strings each, two Yu (or
Sheng) and one hanging drum. The other instruments found were three Xiao
(a reed instrument consisting of a bundle of 13 flutes, each of different
thickness), two Chi (a flute with a closed tube, blown transversely, with
the air exit on top, and the five finger holes open "forward"-- toward the
player. The method of playing the Chi, by opening and closing holes,
bespeaks a close relationship with the ocarina), seven 35-stringed Se and
a small drum. The most distinguished among them were Zeng Houyi bells --
the gem of ancient Chinese Art:
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| The Zeng Houyi bells |
The Zeng
Houyi bells are a three-tiered set which has 65 refined bronze bells,
including a large Jian drum (90cm in diameter, the drum was suspended
from a framework in such a way that the drum head faced the striker), one set of
bells and one set of chimes. They formed the three sides of a rectangle.
The musical range of the Zeng Houyi
bells, which can carry the main melody as well as the harmony, was more than
five octaves, and of these three distinct groups have 12 complete notes
each.
All the musical instruments excavated from
the Zeng Houyi tomb show superb craftsmanship and function surprisingly well.
Indeed, some could not be surpassed even today.