There are countless bird calls in The Hundred Birds of Prey, which is an imaginary reference to all birds, so there are countless bird calls. It is as if you can hear the calls of cuckoos, partridges, swallows, mountain chirps, blue finches, painted birds, larks, blue waxbills, and other birds in the Hundred Birds of Prey.
"Hundred Birds Towards the Phoenix" is a famous Han Chinese folk music, which is popular in a wide range of regions, with different versions in Shandong, Anhui, Henan and Hebei, etc. The music evokes people's love of nature and memories of their laboring life with its enthusiastic and cheerful melody.
The original name of the piece is "Ten Kinds of Scenery", which is the most representative of many suona pieces, and it interprets the expressive power of the suona to an extreme.
The Hundred Birds Toward the Phoenix is one of the most comprehensive suona pieces in the oboe repertoire, and for the player, this piece requires the use of spit and glissando, which are unique to suona playing techniques, as well as difficult techniques such as the tongue punch and the air punch.
Related Information
In Hundred Birds, the instrument that imitates a bird's call is the suona. The lark's performance form is the violin sonata. The performance form of the bird in the shade is a flute solo. The Mornings of the Miaoling is played as a flute or mouth flute solo. The Cuckoo Dance is for orchestra. The instrument that imitates the call of the phoenix is the suona.