What are the three categories of Han music? Silk and bamboo music, stringed music, and wind and percussion music.

The classification and performance forms of Guangdong Han music are organized into five categories according to the performance forms of traditional Guangdong Han music and the long-term evolution of performance habits and different uses. The first one is silk string music, commonly known as chords and strings. It is the most popular and popularized form of Guangdong Han music. It is played with the head-string (commonly known as the dangguizi) or the tihu, and is accompanied by instruments such as the yangqin, pipa, sanxian, flute, and the coconut hu. The repertoire of the silk string category is numerous, and there are 430 pieces in the Han music repertoire that has been compiled. The second is Qing music, also known as Confucian music. It pursues a more elegant form of performance, often for the activities of the literati. It is played with fewer musical instruments, mainly guzheng, pipa, coconut beard, Dongxiao, etc. The repertoire of Qing music is 56 pieces. The repertoire of Qingle is 56 songs. The third one is the Han music big gongs and drums, also known as the eight tones. It is mainly active in traditional festivals such as folk welcoming the gods or haunting the Lantern Festival. It is mainly played by suona, and the percussion includes: big drum, suo gong, big cymbal, small cymbal, bowl gong, tongjin, small gong, and horse gong (for the eight tones). There are only 23 pieces of Han music big gongs and drums in the Han music library. The fourth is the music of Zhongjunban: historically, it is a professional or semi-professional folk music class or society, which is mainly used for folk wedding and funeral celebrations as an orchestra of ceremonial nature. It takes suona as the main instrument, with percussion and a number of silk strings, in the Han music repertoire it is second only to the number of silk strings, *** there are 62. Zhongjunban music performance is more concerned about the form and occasion, therefore, it is subdivided into ritual music (such as "Haunted Flower Hall", "towards the son of heaven"), sacrificial music (such as "Dale", "send song"), joyful music (such as "marrying a good man", "Jade Beauty"), knocking board music (such as "Jiangxi Tune", "Acacia"), ditty blowing (such as "selling groceries", "Flower Drum Tune"). Fifth is the temple music, which is the blowing music played by the monks when they perform religious ceremonies. When playing, it is mainly suona, with percussion, a number of silk string music, such music has 31 songs. The performance of temple music is concerned with the object of the puja. Such as the death of a hundred-year-old man, playing the repertoire is "towards the son of heaven"; not on the life of the death of the people, playing the repertoire is "crying the emperor"; general death, playing the repertoire is the "Buddha mantra", "five more Buddha", "the big river", "tears of sorrow", "crying" and so on; the general purpose of the funeral repertoire is the "Buddha song".