Ci (Lyric
Poetry) is a new form of poetry that sprung up in the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and
Five Dynasties Period (907-979), which can be performed with music.
Chinese music experienced significant
changes in the Sui and Tang dynasties (581-907). With communication of politics,
military affairs, business, missionaries and culture, etc., foreign and ethnical
music was introduced to the Central Plains in great quantity, which was not only
popular among ordinary people, but also in the upper class and palace. It
gradually blended with Chinese traditional music of the Han nationality, which
gave birth to Yanyue (referring generally to all music and dances
entertaining banquets). Also known as Popular Music, Yanyue was the most
widespread and popular music with great vitality compared with Yayue
(Elegant Music). There were 222 melodies of Yanyue played with lyrics at
dinnertime in the Tang Dynasty. The length of every line of the lyrics varied
with the change of rhythms of the melody and these lyrics were the proper form
of Ci (Lyric Poetry).
There are many tonal patterns and rhyme
schemes of Ci poetry. A
book in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) collected 660 tonal patterns. With
successive additions, there are more than 1,000 tonal patterns in total, but
among them only about 100 are frequently used.
Quzici in the
Tang Dynasty first prevailed among ordinary people, but the literati began to
compose the Lyric Poetry for music since the mid Tang Dynasty. Ci at that time had to be in line with
strict rules of both tonal patterns of the music and rhymes of the poetry. From
the Song Dynasty (960-1279), a lot of Ci composers were not specialized in
music, and thus they composed Ci only in accordance with rules and forms of poems. Therefore,
Ci gradually could not be
played with music, and became an important form of Chinese traditional
poetry.