THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONCEPT OF MUSIC IN CHINA'S EARLY HISTORY few
sources of music history from the pre-Confucian and Confucian periods have had the early sources on Chinese music from the Chou dynasty (c. questions on both the word and the concept of music in China's early history. The written character for music in its modern form (fig. Now, what the archaic graph YtCeh (= music) really represents is certainly the pictograph music during the Shang II period. This commentary brings us to a further ambiguity in the character for music. character, and have built up theories of the psychological content of Chinese musical originally the character Yfeh meant "music" but in the past people have made the with which instrumental music is made: silk (strings), bamboo (pipes, flutes), metal music actually performed, but rather the theory of music - an interesting insight. We may therefore conclude that in the early history of Chinese music there existed a the monopolized knowledge on which were based the early ideas on music and the observations of musical and other sound phenomena so early in China's history is We have not been able to find an archaic form of Sh ng (figs. in no way rejected that these three characters may have had a connection with music d is a pictogram from a bronze inscription of the early Western Chou period (c. C.), in which the incomplete character for music (the middle part missing) with the graph for music, although the middle part of the archaic music graph is 28 Figure z is the modern form of the archaic character and is In summarizing, we might say that the earliest concept of music in China has been did writings appear which amplified the concept of music, so that it might include all It is very gratifying that a lively interest in the early music history of the nation is The "Modern" character forms still in use today date back to the Earlier Han dynasty, Early Western Chou period, c. In studies of the early history of Chinese music, learned philology has as yet contributed j is Sh ng in its modern form; k is a shortening of the complete form j. 1 is Yin in modern form, m an archaic form (K. and reaches to some extent similar conclusions ("Musical Terms in a Chinese