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Ritual Ballads
Ritual ballads are those sung on such occasions as
sacrifices, marriage, blessings, and rituals to avert misfortune. As many
rituals become out of date and forgotten and then die out with the change of
social life, their ballads suffer from the danger of extinction. Therefore, the
folklore values of these ballads are highly treasured.
According to the function of rituals, ritual ballads roughly fall into four
categories: sacrifice, etiquette and custom (including marriage, burial,
house-building, birthday the third day and 100th day of a new-born), seasons and
festivals, and Meishu (a sacrifice ritual).
Most of China's ethnic communities are polytheistic. They believe in
different gods and goddesses such as the Gods of Heaven and Earth, Goddess of
Wind, Goddess of Lightening, God of Mountain, Local Guardian God, God of Trees
and God of Wells. People hold different rituals to worship them and the
sacrificial prayers are ritual ballads.
China is a land of rituals and ceremonies, where etiquettes of inter-personal
communications are highly valued. This gives rise to a wide range of ritual
ballads, among which marriage is an important one with a lot of rituals.
There are different kinds of rituals for marriage. From match-making,
engagement, dowry preparing, wedding weeping, bride greeting, formal bows to
heaven and earth, entering the bridal chamber, to the bride's home visit at the
3rd day of marriage, different sequences are accompanied by different fixed
rituals. Every ritual, conveying specific wishes, expectations and blessings,
naturally entails a variety of ritual ballads and singing opportunities. Among
the ritual marriage ballads, the most sentimental and moving ones are for
"wedding weeping", represented by "My Cousin Sister" and "Mum's Dearest
Daughter" of Sichuan
Province, and "Wedding Weeping Song" of Shanghai.
House-building was also of great importance for a household in the past.
There are a set of rituals for the site choosing, beam selecting, wall building,
beam putting, gate making, and house-warming celebrations, accompanied by
congratulatory songs.
There are many traditional festivals in China, and each ethnic community has
its own unique ones. Take the Han people for instance; there are Spring
Festival (i51 of Ist lunar month), Lantern
Festival (15th of Ist lunar month), Pure Brightness Festival, Dragon Boat
Festival (5th lunar month), Spirit Festival (15th of 7th lunar month), Mid-Autumn
Festival (15th of 8th lunar month), Double Ninth
Festival (9th of 9th lunar month), Seeing-off Kitchen God Festival (23rd of
12th lunar month) and more.
There are 24 solar terms in a Chinese lunar year, each of which has its
seasonal temperature change and farming activities, as well as ballad songs. For
the Han people, the most exciting festivals are Shehuo (Merry-Making
Festivities) before the Spring Festival, and the Lantern Festival (15th of Ist
lunar month), which are all highlighted by many ballads. Among other ethnic
festivals and ballads, the Torchlight Festival of the Yi ethnic group and
Water-Splashing Festival of the Dai ethnic group are also world known.
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