"Bubo", "Bulotuo", "Loud and Clear Song", "Song of the Horsebone Hu", "Mo Yi Da Wang".
1. "Bulodo".
Usually in folklore, it is usually sung only on the occasion of a village-wide or clan-wide celebration, or a major festival, and must also be sung in its entirety, and the most skillful sorcerer or singer must be invited to sing it. When this activity is held, everyone must be extremely serious attitude and immense piety to participate.
2. "The Great King of Moyi".
The legend is widely spread in the Zhuang areas such as Hechi, Nandan, Yishan and Liucheng, etc. In addition to the story of "Mo Yi Da Wang" in the form of a legend, there have also been epic poems, dramas or dances of "Mo Yi Da Wang" circulating in the Zhuang folklore.
3. "Loud and Clear Song".
The form of expression is more special. Instead of telling a complete story in a narrative way, it takes the annexation and war of the feudal lords as the background, and expresses the sad and happy feelings of a pair of young men and women through lyrical antiphonal singing.
4. "Bubo".
"Buber" is a mythological story circulating in the Zhuang region. There are different versions in prose and poetry. The prose ones are orally circulated in the folklore, without a unified and fixed title.
5. The Song of the Horsebone Hu.
Also known as "Singing Wenxiu", it is a folk song of strangling feet circulated among the Zhuang of the Hongshui River. It was adapted from the Han story of He Wenxiu. After it was adapted into a Zhuang folk work, the translator and organizer renamed it "The Song of the Horsebone Hu" because it was sung to the accompaniment of the traditional Zhuang instrument, the horsebone hu.
Baidu Encyclopedia - Folk Songs of the Zhuang People