Dihu
Encyclopedia : D : DI : DIH : Dihu
The dihu (低胡, pinyin: dīhú) is a large bowed string instrument from China. It has a large soundbox covered on one end with snakeskin. Like most other members of the huqin family of instruments, it has two strings and is held vertically. The instrument's name derives from "dī," meaning "low," and "hú" (short for huqin).
The instrument comes in three sizes:
- The xiaodihu (also called dahu or cizhonghu), pitched one octave below the erhu (tuned D-A, with its lowest D one whole step above the viola's lowest C). It is the tenor member of the erhu family (the erhu being the soprano member and the zhonghu being the alto member).
- The zhongdihu, pitched one octave below the zhonghu (tuned G-D, as the middle strings of the cello). It is the bass member of the erhu family.
- The dadihu, pitched one octave below the xiaodihu and two octaves below the erhu (tuned D-A, with its lowest D one whole step above the cello's lowest C). It is the contrabass member of the erhu family.
External links
- [Dihu page] (Chinese)
- [Xiaodihu photo] (xiaodihu on left; erhu on right for comparison)
- [Zhongdihu photo] (zhongdihu on left; erhu on right for comparison)
- [Dadihu photo] (dadihu on left; erhu on right for comparison)
See also
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