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Anyone been to Xinjiang, PRC?
If so, can you possibly tell me a bit about your dealings with the Uighur people? I'm getting ready to travel there in a few days, and in light of yesterdays bombing in Kashgar, I'm a little curious.
How were you recepted during your time there? Right now, I've never really had a bad experience traveling in China (outside of the obvious toilet and food related ones), so I have no reason to believe this will be any different. But, are there any things I should pay particular attention to, culturally speaking?
Lu, thanks for offering that, but I can read all of that on the web, I didn't want someone to just copy and paste a basic description. I was looking for some personal experiences there, specifically dealing with relations with the Uighur people.
Fly: Thanks! Is there anything else I should keep an eye open for? You can email me if you want.
5 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region is dominated by Uighurs, Turkic people related to others from Central Asia. There is much variation in the music of Xinjiang, including unique regional differences in Ili, Kashi, Hotan and Aksu. The southern area includes the simple songs of Hotan, the dance-oriented music of the Kuga and the complexly rhythmic songs of the Kashgar. Ili has perhaps the most well-known musical tradition in Xinjiang, including a number of emotional tunes that are narrative in form.The Uighurs' best-known musical form is the On Ikki Muqam, a complex suite of twelve sections related to Uzbekistan| and Tajikistan forms. These complex symphonies vary wildly between suites in the same muqam, and are built on a seven-note scale. Instruments typically include dap (a drum), dulcimers, fiddles and lutes; performers have some space for personal embellishments, especially in the percussion. However, there is much variation on the number and kind of instruments used in the performance of a muqam.
The sanam tradition is a kind of dance music popular among the Uighurs, while spoken songs like Maida, Eytixish and Kuxak are popular love songs with simple tunes.
Traditional folk instruments include the konghou and pipa, which were found in Qiuci during the Sui and Tang dynasties, and then spread to East Asia. The rawap, tanbur and dutar are three very important instruments in Uighur music; they are all strings and are respectively high-, middle- and low-pitched.
The most popular performer of recent times is Turdi Akhun, who recorded most of the muqams in the 1950s. A regional popular music industry arose in the 1980s, alongside Deng Xiaoping's loosening of cultural restrictions. The resulting pop industry produced bands like Shireli, whose 1995 "" was a reggaeish version of a local folk song. Later prominent musicians include Pasha Isha, Äskär and his band Grey Wolf (band), Abdulla Abdurehim and Alim Jan, who appeared in such international releases as the soundtrack to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, where he plays the stringed rawap. Jan's father was also a renowned folk musician, known as Tursun Tanbur due to his skill with the tanbur, a stringed instrument like a lock-necked lute. Rock and roll|Rock and Heavy metal music|heavy metal bands like Täklimakan and Riwäyat are also well-known in Xinjiang, as is the flamenco guitar stylings of the Gipsy Kings.
- Wilson!!!!!Lv 61 decade ago
I have a good friend there named Abudullah who is an Uyghur who speaks their Turkic language and Mandrain. He lives in Urumqi and is during business with the Han ethnicities.
I myself will never judge an Uyghur. There's always bad people. It's a human thing really.
As for Xinjiang, do NOT drink water or any drinks after you ate their honey melons because you will have digestion problems.
And the are 2 hours behind of Beijing time. But my personal experience it might be 3.
Lamb and beef are the only meats they eat. Their cooking of the lamb is BY FAR THE BEST tasting lamb I ever had and I hated eating lambs. DO NOT order chicken or pigs and is considered disrespectful. And do not order FISH in a Uyghur restaurant because they burned the fish skin and the meat is so dry. Try fish at the a Chinese restaurant...they are much better.
Source(s): Ties with Urumqi Police department as well as Kasghar City Police department. - 1 decade ago
I have lived Xinjiang for 13years.
Only one thing:
never talk about pig or eat pork when Uighur are around.
Then you can enjoy a nice trip.
- 6 years ago
Very fun place, now anger is festering towards central Chinese government because of anti Islamic acts.
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