Content deleted Content added
The ''bu'', and an accompanying instrument, the ''hun'' are the "instruments of the 'earth' category", in that "like earthenware ceramics, the hun and bu are shaped from clay and then baked".<ref>Hye-jin Song, ''Confucian Ritual Music of Korea: Tribute to Confucius and Royal Ancestors'' (Korea Foundation, 2008), p. 158.</ref> |
→top: add reflist Tags: Mobile edit Mobile app edit Android app edit |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
The ''bu'', and an accompanying instrument, the ''[[hun (instrument)|hun]]'' are the "instruments of the 'earth' category", in that "like earthenware ceramics, the hun and bu are shaped from clay and then baked".<ref>Hye-jin Song, ''Confucian Ritual Music of Korea: Tribute to Confucius and Royal Ancestors'' (Korea Foundation, 2008), p. 158.</ref> |
The ''bu'', and an accompanying instrument, the ''[[hun (instrument)|hun]]'' are the "instruments of the 'earth' category", in that "like earthenware ceramics, the hun and bu are shaped from clay and then baked".<ref>Hye-jin Song, ''Confucian Ritual Music of Korea: Tribute to Confucius and Royal Ancestors'' (Korea Foundation, 2008), p. 158.</ref> |
||
==References== |
|||
{{reflist}} |
|||
[[Category:Asian percussion instruments]] |
[[Category:Asian percussion instruments]] |
Revision as of 05:03, 13 January 2024
Bu (hangul: 부; hanja: 缶) is a clay pot beaten with a bamboo whisk and used in Korean Confucian court and ritual music; derived from the Chinese fǒu.
The bu, and an accompanying instrument, the hun are the "instruments of the 'earth' category", in that "like earthenware ceramics, the hun and bu are shaped from clay and then baked".[1]
References
- ^ Hye-jin Song, Confucian Ritual Music of Korea: Tribute to Confucius and Royal Ancestors (Korea Foundation, 2008), p. 158.