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[[Category:Chinese musical instruments]]
[[Category:Chinese musical instruments]]


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Revision as of 14:39, 18 June 2008

For the ancient Chinese mouth organ, see Yu (wind instrument).

The yu (Chinese: ; pinyin: yǔ) was a wooden percussion instrument carved in the shape of a tiger with a serrated back comprising 27 "teeth," used since ancient times in China for Confucian court ritual music. It was played by striking its head three times with a bamboo whisk made from approximately 15 stalks of bamboo, and then scraping it across the serrated back once to mark the end of a piece of music.

The yu is mentioned, along with another percussion instrument called zhu (), in pre-Qin Dynasty annals, and appears in the Classic of History.[1]

The yu was adopted by the Korean court in ancient times, where it was known as eo (hangul: ; hanja: ), and is still used in Confucian ritual music.