Chinese Percussion Music
Grade Levels: 5 - 10
Teach students about Chinese percussion instruments and ensemble performances. This lesson was contributed by Han Kuo-Huang.
Objectives
- Students will play in a Chinese percussion ensemble.
- Students will perform several compositions with percussion instruments.
Materials
- Lion Dance Number 1, Lion Dance Number 2, and Dragon Dance (found in Chinese Percussion Ensembles).
- Cymbals
- Small gongs played with a thin wooden mallet
- Large gongs played with a padded mallet
- Large drums played with two thick sticks
Procedure
- Give the students the following background information: The Chinese call their
percussion ensemble luogu, which means gongs and drums. The ensemble
may range in size from two to a small group of players. Percussion ensembles are used in
a variety of settings: theaters, parades, and folk music groups. The four major
instruments used in Chinese percussion music are the bo cymbals, the xiaoluo
(small gong), the daluo (large gong), and the dagu (large skin-headed drum).
If Chinese instruments are not available, use Western substitutes, such as drums,
tam-tam, and small cymbals.
- Perform the Lion Dance Number 1
and Lion Dance Number 2 (Found in Chinese Percussion Ensembles)
and then perform the Dragon Dance (Found in Chinese Percussion Ensembles).
Read the following performance instructions before proceeding:
- The drummer is the leader of the ensemble and sets the tempo (each quarter note
equals approximately 100-112) by striking the drum twice on the rim before each
selection (indicated in the score by the x-shaped note heads). Each composition
repeats in ostinato fashion. To end the performance, the drummer should play the
ending signal, which is a drumroll followed by two eighth notes, shown just
below the appropriate measure of the score. This signal leads the group to the
conclusion.
- Perform each composition alone. When the students have mastered the performances, play all the compositions together as a suite, repeating the individual segments as many times as you wish. When played as a suite, only the introductory signal for the first piece is used; the ending measures of the first and second pieces are omitted. The ending signals in the first and second pieces become changing signals for the next section.
- The drummer is the leader of the ensemble and sets the tempo (each quarter note
equals approximately 100-112) by striking the drum twice on the rim before each
selection (indicated in the score by the x-shaped note heads). Each composition
repeats in ostinato fashion. To end the performance, the drummer should play the
ending signal, which is a drumroll followed by two eighth notes, shown just
below the appropriate measure of the score. This signal leads the group to the
conclusion.
Standards Correlations
Standard 2
: Performing on instruments, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of musicStandard 5
: Reading and notating music
Excerpted from Multicultural Perspectives in Music Education.
| Provided in partnership with MENC |

