NO dude wtf NO.... Erhu is a whole diff thing compared to a Violin is like you comparing a Guzheng to a Guitar? no lol diff culture dude accept what they are
That's not exactly true. The violin in its more or less current form was invented in Cremona in the late 16th century, based on various fiddle-type instruments (such as rebec and vielle) dating back about 1000 years in Europe. The erhu in its more or less current form was developed around 100 years ago, but before that there were many other kinds of local huqins (not the same in construction as today's erhu) with various names (such as xiqin), also dating about about 1000 years.
i want to learn to play that instrument ;_;
Francescaviolin1987 2 years ago
this is a tuned to G-D 's erhu .
ngtszman 2 years ago
In Other Words, A Chinese Violin.
shevchenko0609 3 years ago
I don't like these "other words"... or others like these
Why nobody calls violin as Occidental Er'hu, or horizontal Er'hu?
U38066 3 years ago
Absolutely among the best of the best I have ever listened to!
david1234lee 2 years ago
NO dude wtf NO.... Erhu is a whole diff thing compared to a Violin is like you comparing a Guzheng to a Guitar? no lol diff culture dude accept what they are
SVTsports 2 years ago
the Erhu existed hundreds of years before the "western" violin, idiot.
SuperstarRichardG 1 year ago
That's not exactly true. The violin in its more or less current form was invented in Cremona in the late 16th century, based on various fiddle-type instruments (such as rebec and vielle) dating back about 1000 years in Europe. The erhu in its more or less current form was developed around 100 years ago, but before that there were many other kinds of local huqins (not the same in construction as today's erhu) with various names (such as xiqin), also dating about about 1000 years.
dbadagna 1 year ago
what is she uesing to play this song?
very nice
nanafujifangirl 4 years ago
its called "erhu", a famous chinese bowed string instrument.
kwwkwwkww 3 years ago
ohhh ok thank you so much
nanafujifangirl 3 years ago 2
@nanafujifangirl I think more precisely it's a "di yin erhu", where's it sounds more mellow than the normal erhu.
dramaSUZ 10 months ago
@dramaSUZ
Ohh okay, Thank you :p
nanafujifangirl 9 months ago