Why do we need to twist rice-planting songs to pay respect to the New Year?

The reason why we should twist rice-planting songs to pay homage to the New Year is as follows:

Range-planting songs are called stilt walkers in rural areas, which originated from ancient human labor and ancient rituals in which people prayed for a good harvest, prayed to God for blessing of the farmland, and a way of worship, and then evolved into a folk entertainment project, which incorporates a large number of historical themes, characters, stories, opera dances, folk legends and so on. The song incorporates a large number of historical characters, stories, operas and dances, folklore and so on.

Range songs to pay homage to the New Year in the northeastern Liaoning and western Chaoyang counties and districts are a great, whether it's windy, rainy or snowy rice-planting songs as usual, it is a lively atmosphere to pay homage to the New Year. Yangge is a traditional Han Chinese folk song and dance of a way of entertainment, wherever there are Han Chinese in our country are visible in his shadow, in our northeastern Liaosi region is also a way of everyone's delight. Northeastern people like the popular entertainment program Yangge, Yangge is the people after dinner spiritual food.

Introduction:

Yangge is a kind of mass and representative folk dance widely circulated in China (mainly in the northern region), different regions have different titles and styles. In folklore, there are two types of rice-planting songs: those performed on stilts are called "rice-planting songs on stilts", and those performed without stilts are called "rice-planting songs on the ground".

Recently, the term "rice-planting song" mostly refers to "ground-planting song". The long history of rice-planting songs, the Southern Song Dynasty Zhou Mi in the "Old Story of Wulin" in the introduction of the folk dance team on the "Murata music" records, the Qing Dynasty Wu Xilin's "New Year's Day miscellaneous singing copy" expressly recorded the existing rice-planting songs and the Song Dynasty "Murata music" of the relationship between the source and flow. 2006 May 20, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council, the State Council and the State Council. On May 20, 2006, the rice-planting songs were approved by the State Council to be included in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage list.