Which ethnic group is the Rustom Ballad from?

The Rustom Ballad is of Korean ethnicity.

The Ballad of the Rustom is a Korean folk song. The song has seven phrases, the third and fourth and the sixth and seventh phrases are the repetition and variation of the first and second phrases, and the fifth phrase is accompanied by a refrain, which develops the tune. The entire folk song is unified and varied. The music is light and bright, vividly portraying the Korean girl's industrious and lively image.

Introduction of the Korean People

The Korean people are an ethnic minority in China, living in northeastern China, especially in Jilin, Heilongjiang and Liaoning. The main crop of the Korean people is rice, and the national festivals include the Festival of the Head of the Year, the Festival of the Last Dollar, the Cold Food Festival, and the Festival of the Autumn Sunset, etc. The traditional Korean dances include the Sword Dance, the Long Drum Dance, the Dragon Drum Dance, and the Farmer's Music Dance. Gagyeol, Xiqin, tubular pipes, long drums and tambourines are the traditional ethnic musical instruments of the Koreans.

The Koreans like to wear plain white clothes, usually short clothes and long pants. Men's shirts are buttonless and knotted with cloth plus kangs, and their pants have a large crotch and are laced at the leg. Women's short clothes without buttons, to the ribbon for the knot, long skirts divided into wrapped skirt, tube skirt (only before marriage). Elderly women tend to wear white long skirts, middle-aged women tend to wear wrapped skirts, long as their heels.

Young women's skirts are mostly brightly colored satin. In recent times, men tend to wear flat white rubber shoes and straw shoes for labor. Women wear boat-shaped rubber shoes. Now, in addition to festivals or national gatherings, the Korean people basically do not wear national costume, and the Han people have little difference.