statues displayed at the
Shanghai Museum, dating to the
Eastern Han period (25–220 AD) According to legends, the founder of music in Chinese mythology was
Ling Lun who, at the request of the
Yellow Emperor to create a system of music, made bamboo pipes tuned to the sounds of birds including the phoenix. A
twelve-tone musical system was created based on the pitches of the bamboo pipes, the first of these pipes produced the 'yellow bell' () pitch, and a set of tuned bells were then created from the pipes.
Early history from
Henan and others play the Sheng'', 2nd century BCE,
Mawangdui tomb. Archaeological evidence indicates that music culture developed in China from a very early period. Excavations in Jiahu Village in
Wuyang County,
Henan found
bone flutes dated to 9,000 years ago, and clay music instruments called
Xun thought to be 7,000 years old have been found in the
Hemudu sites in
Zhejiang and
Banpo in
Xi'an. 5th century B.C. from
Hubei During the
Zhou dynasty, a formal system of court and ceremonial music later termed
yayue (meaning "elegant music") was established. The word music (,
yue) in ancient China can also refer to dance as music and dance were considered integral part of the whole, and its meaning can also be further extended to poetry as well as other art forms and rituals. The word "dance" () similarly also referred to music, and every dance would have had a piece of music associated with it. The most important set of music of the period was the Six-dynasty Music Dance () performed in rituals in the royal court. Music in the Zhou dynasty was conceived as a cosmological manifestation of the sound of nature integrated into the binary universal order of
yin and yang, and this concept has had an enduring influence over later Chinese thinking on music. "Correct" music according to Zhou concept would involve instruments correlating to the five elements of nature and would bring harmony to nature. Around or before the 7th century BC, a system of pitch generation and
pentatonic scale was derived from a cycle-of-fifths theory. Some popular forms of music, however, were considered corrupting in the Confucian view.
Mozi on the other hand condemned making music, and argued in
Against Music () that music is an extravagance and indulgence that serves no useful purpose and may be harmful. According to
Mencius, a powerful ruler once asked him whether it was moral if he preferred popular music to the classics. The answer was that it only mattered that the ruler loved his subjects. In ancient China the social status of musicians was much lower than that of painters, though music was seen as central to the harmony and longevity of the state. Almost every emperor took folk songs seriously, sending officers to collect songs to record the popular culture. One of the Confucianist Classics, The
Classic of Poetry, contained many folk songs dating from 800 BC to about 400 BC.
Imperial China drummer ,
Shanxi province, dated 571 AD during the
Northern Qi Dynasty, showing male court musicians playing stringed instruments, either the
liuqin or
pipa, and a woman playing a
konghou (harp) relief of musicians The
Imperial Music Bureau, first established in the
Qin dynasty (221–207 BC), was greatly expanded under the emperor
Han Wudi (140–87 BC) and charged with supervising court music and military music and determining what folk music would be officially recognized. In subsequent dynasties, the development of Chinese music was influenced by the musical traditions of Central Asia which also introduced elements of Indian music. Instruments of Central Asian origin such as
pipa were adopted in China, the Indian
Heptatonic scale was introduced in the 6th century by a musician from Kucha named Sujiva, although the heptatonic scale was later abandoned. the female musicians in the center of the image are playing
transverse bamboo flutes and
guan, and the male musician is playing a wooden clapper called
paiban. The oldest extant written Chinese music is "
Youlan" () or the Solitary Orchid, composed during the 6th or 7th century, but has also been attributed to Confucius. The first major well-documented flowering of Chinese music was for the
qin during the
Tang dynasty (618-907AD), though the qin is known to have been played since before the Han dynasty. This is based on the conjecture that because the recorded examples of Chinese music are ceremonial, and the ceremonies in which they were employed are thought to have existed "perhaps more than one thousand years before Christ", the musical compositions themselves were performed, even in 1000 BC, in precisely the manner prescribed by the sources that were written down in the seventh century AD. (It is based on this conjecture that Van Aalst dates the "Entrance Hymn for the Emperor" to c. 1000 BC.) File:Guqin-Yangguan Sandie.ogg|left|thumb|Yangguan Sandie [Three Refrains on the Yang Pass Theme], one of the great Tang masterpieces found in the Qinxue Rumen (1867) played on qin. Through succeeding dynasties over thousands of years, Chinese musicians developed a
large assortment of different instruments and playing styles. A wide variety of these instruments, such as
guzheng and
dizi are indigenous, although many popular traditional musical instruments were introduced from Central Asia, such as the
erhu and
pipa. The presence of European music in China appeared as early as 1601 when the Jesuit priest
Matteo Ricci presented a
Harpsichord to the
Ming imperial court, and trained four eunuchs to play it. During the late
Qing dynasty era, the influence of Western music began to be felt.
Republican era (1912–1949) '' anthem in the Denton Gazette newspaper The
New Culture Movement of the 1910s and 1920s produced a great deal of lasting interest in Western music. A number of Chinese musicians returned from studying abroad to perform Western
classical music, composing work hits on Western musical notation system. The
Kuomintang tried to sponsor modern music adoptions via the
Shanghai Conservatory of Music despite the ongoing political crisis. Twentieth-century cultural philosophers like
Xiao Youmei,
Cai Yuanpei,
Feng Zikai and Wang Guangqi wanted to see Chinese music adopted to the best standard possible. There were many different opinions regarding the best standard.
Maoists considered pop music as a decline to the art form in mainland China. In 1949 the
Kuomintang relocated to Taiwan, and the
People's Republic of China was established.
Revolutionary songs would become heavily promoted by the state. The
Maoists, during the
Cultural Revolution, pushed revolutionary music as the only acceptable genre; because of propaganda, this genre largely overshadowed all others and came almost to define mainland Chinese music. This is still, in some ways, an ongoing process, but some scholars and musicians (Chinese and otherwise) are trying to revive old music. After the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre, a new fast tempo
Northwest Wind style was launched by protesters to counter the government. The music would progress into
Chinese rock, which remained popular in the 1990s. However, music in China is very much state-owned as the TV, media, and major concert halls are all controlled by the CCP. The government mainly chose not to support Chinese rock by limiting its exposure and airtime. As a result, the genre never reached the mainstream in its entirety.
2000–present Annual events such as the
Midi Modern Music Festival in
Beijing attracts tens of thousands of visitors. There was also the "Snow Mountain Music Festival" in
Yunnan province 2002. Today, rock music is centered on almost exclusively in Beijing and Shanghai, and has very limited influence over Chinese society.
Wuhan and
Sichuan are sometimes considered pockets of rock music culture as well. It points to a significant cultural, political, and social difference that exist between China, the West, or even different parts within China. While rock has existed in China for decades, the milestone that put the genre on the international map is when
Cui Jian played with
The Rolling Stones in 2003, at the age of 42. China has also become a destination of major Western rock and pop artists; many foreign acts have toured in China and performed in multiple concerts in recent decades, including
Beyoncé,
Eric Clapton,
Nine Inch Nails,
Avril Lavigne,
Linkin Park and
Talib Kweli. Mainland China has a high
piracy rate along with issues of
intellectual properties. Normally there is some delay before the products are released into mainland China, with occasional exceptions, such as the work of Cui Jian, which was released in Taiwan, Hong Kong and mainland China simultaneously. Consequently, a delay in release time is also the biggest driver of piracy, since individuals would rather pirate from the outside. The modern market is not only hindered by
rights issues, as there are many other factors such as
profit margin,
income and other economical questions. In 2015, the digital music market in China was expected to be worth . In 2015 China had the 14th largest music market in the world, with revenues of . As of 2016 there were 213
music charts in China. Also as of 2016, the three largest
music streaming and
download services in China are
KuGou, with a 28% share of the market,
QQ Music with 15% and Kuwo with 13%. China was expected to become one of the largest music markets in the world by 2020. == Traditional music ==