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Saving old songs

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2015-05-26 09:13China Daily Editor: Si Huan
Members of the Hani ethnic group in Puchun village in Yunnan province's Honghe county, Honghe Hani and Yi autonomous prefecture, sing their polyphonic folk songs, which are listed as national intangible cultural heritage. (Wang Kaihao/China Daily)

Members of the Hani ethnic group in Puchun village in Yunnan province's Honghe county, Honghe Hani and Yi autonomous prefecture, sing their polyphonic folk songs, which are listed as national intangible cultural heritage. (Wang Kaihao/China Daily)

The terraces are singing.

More than 100 members of the Hani ethnic group in Puchun village have turned this valley into a massive stage. Several women are busily transplanting rice seedlings. Perhaps the songs bouncing off every corner of the fields here are a hymn for not only nature, but the spirit of labor.

Chen Xialing, 28, stands on the ridge of fields and plucks her three-stringed instrument in celebration of this important moment.

"It is not a performance. It is a scene from daily life," Chen says.

This mountainous village is in Honghe county, in Yunnan province's Honghe Hani and Yi autonomous prefecture. An outsider coming to the village will have a white-knuckled drive, navigating the rough, zigzagging roads. This road is the only way to access the village by car, and few visitors dare to make the journey, leaving the place relatively unspoiled.

Well, almost.

"You cannot find many people from my generation singing songs at home. They all leave the village to look for jobs," Chen says.

She had left the village three times, but her father always persuaded her to return. The county's cultural bureau eventually offered her a musician's job.

"She sings well, and deserves to stay here," says Chen Xiniang, Chen's father, who is also a national-level inheritor of Hani polyphonic folk music. The genre was registered as a national intangible cultural heritage in 2008. "But most people singing today are older than 40. In the old days, if you couldn't sing, you cannot do anything. You would never find a girlfriend."

Unlike folk songs of other ethnic groups in southwestern China, which are usually upbeat, the songs of the Hani people have a more somber mood.

"No one can say why it is so, but you will probably understand part of the reason when reviewing Hani history," says Wu Zhiming, from Honghe county's cultural promotion office, who has collected Hani folk songs since the 1980s.

The Hani ethnic group is believed to have originally migrated from the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau after continuous conflicts with other tribes. They eventually settled in the mountainous area of southern Yunnan.

To survive in the rough environment, they gradually built the Hani Rice Terraces, the agricultural landscape in Honghe prefecture. The 1,300-year-old terraces were listed on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage register in 2013.

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