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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 2 page paper provides an overview of the gongs throughout the world. This paper relates how gongs were first created and how they spread. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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2 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHGong333.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a number of regions of the world dating back over 4000 years (Borakove, 2007). The significance of gongs relates to their use as representative musical instruments and as an
identifiable icons of Eastern religious traditions. Historians maintain that gongs were first created in four main cultural centers, Burma, China, Annam and Java, and that variations in the shape
and composition of these gongs can be viewed in each of these centers (Perry, 2005). The tradition of gong making was passed down through families, with the mastery of
the gong creation viewed as an artistic and almost religious process (Perry, 2005). In many of these cultures, the gong makers were believed to be magical and their artistic
creations were valued both for their beauty and their sound (Perry, 2005). Researchers maintain that gongs initially created in Asian subsequently developed in Java and then became a part of
Indonesian culture in the 9th century (Borakove, 2007). Following trade routes, gongs migrated to Africa and became a part of both religious and musical culture. After the
European colonization of Asia, gongs were introduced into European culture and became an integral part of European orchestral compositions. The composer Francois Gossec introduced gongs into the percussion comments
of his symphony Mirabeau (Borakove, 2007). Debussy, though, was noted as the first major composer to repeatedly use gongs in his compositions (Borakove, 2007). One of the misnomers
about gongs in the modern era is that they are representative of Asian culture and Asia religion. Though gongs were first created in Asia, the adaptations to gongs as
they spread internationally has led to very different types of gongs and variations based in the craft of gong making handed down in families. The extent to which gongs
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