What is the moral of suona song?

The suona song of a hundred birds at the phoenix implies people's admiration and love for nature, as well as their longing and pursuit for a beautiful and happy life.

The suona song "A Hundred Birds Toward the Phoenix" was formerly called "A Hundred Birds' Sound", which is a popular music in Shandong, Anhui, Henan, Hebei and other places in China, with a very strong folk flavor.

It's not a fairy tale that shows hundreds of birds worshipping the Phoenix, but it shows the vibrant nature and expresses people's happy mood with unrestrained and enthusiastic melody and simulated jubilant scenes of hundreds of birds contending and singing with suona. The music is lively and rough, cheerful and vivid, so it is often played at weddings and other festive ceremonies, which has the meaning of good luck and happiness.

Music appreciation:

A Hundred Birds Facing the Phoenix, which was processed by Ren Tongxiang, consists of stretched adagio, slightly faster allegro, birds singing (four paragraphs), colorful phrases and a quick ending. At the beginning of the music, the suona played a beautiful and singing prelude, in which the short and long parallel phrases responded alternately like songs, forming funny and humorous music, which was very interesting in life.

after the prelude, suona blows a warm and cheerful melody to render a lively atmosphere. Then, accompanied by a fixed melody, it plays a passage with a hundred birds singing. Based on the warm and cheerful melody and two passages with a hundred birds singing, the whole song is cyclically changed and repeated, and it is always repeated six times. The singing of hundreds of birds is melodious, short, bright and dim, which vividly depicts the singing of hundreds of birds, showing a lush scene of the spring scenery of hundreds of birds and the glory of all things in nature.