As shown in the picture:
Erhu (Pinyin: Erhu) began in the Tang Dynasty and was called "Xi Qin". It has a history of more than a thousand years. It is a traditional Chinese stringed instrument. Erhu, the two-stringed huqin, also known as "Nanhu" and "Omzi", is one of the main bowed string instruments (stringed instruments) in the Chinese national musical instrument family.
The famous Erhu songs include "The Moon Reflects in Two Springs", "Good Night", "Listening to the Pines", "Horse Racing", "The Grapes Are Ripe", etc.
Origin
Erhu began in the Tang Dynasty and has a history of more than a thousand years. It originated from an ethnic minority in ancient northern my country and was originally called "Ji Qin" and "Xi Qin".
The earliest written record of Ji Qin is Tang Dynasty poet Meng Haoran's "Poetry of Banqueting People in the Mountain Pavilion": Bamboo attracts people playing Ji Qin, and flowers invite guests to pass by. Chen Yang, a scholar of the Song Dynasty, recorded in the "Book of Music" that "Xi Qin is the original Hu Yue..." The poet Cen Shen of the Tang Dynasty recorded the poem "The Chinese army prepares wine and drinks for returning guests. Hu Qin, Pipa and Qiang flute" shows that Hu Qin had begun in the Tang Dynasty. According to legend, Huqin is the general name for Chinese and Western string instruments and plucked instruments.