Zhonghu

The alto erhu (中胡, pinyin: zhōnghú) is a low-pitched Chinese bowed string instrument. Together with the erhu and gaohu, it is a member of the huqin family. It was developed in the 1940s as the alto member of the huqin family (similar in range to the European viola) to increase the pitch range of the instruments used in a Chinese orchestra.[1]

Alto erhu
Classification
Related instruments
Bowed zhonghu

The alto erhu is analogous with the erhu, but is slightly larger and lower pitched. Its body is covered on the playing end with snakeskin. The instrument has two strings, which are generally tuned to the interval of a fifth, to A and E or to G and D (this latter tuning equivalent to the violin's lowest two strings).

Composer Jeremy Zuckerman has used the Zhonghu in critically acclaimed shows' music such as Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra. Spefifically, he has said in the podcast Song Exploder that along with the Erhu, the Zhonghu was used in The Legend of Korra's series finale music. [2]

gollark: It may have originally been thought up for some eugenics-y purpose, I don't know, but that does not invalidate it.
gollark: So... general reasoning tests are... racially biased?
gollark: I'm not saying that if you score high on an IQ test then you will magically start doing better or being more intelligent, merely that it is related to some metrics people care about.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: This is, in fact, a conversation about IQ.

See also

References

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