S2E01 | Too Rich for My Blood | 曲高和寡

 
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Saying: “If the tune is too highbrow no one will sing along”
Pinyin: Qǔ Gāo Hè Guǎ
Chinese: 曲高和寡

 

Welcome back to Season 2 of the Chinese Sayings Podcast!

This time Laszlo digs deep into the Eastern Zhou Dynasty to introduce a Chinese Saying with a story that tells why some music just isn’t for everybody.

Special thanks to Zhou Wei and the team at Chengyu Research Center.


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Terms in Episode

Pinyin/TermChineseEnglish/Meaning
Chéngyǔ成语Chinese Saying or Idiom
Chǔ楚国The Chu State, headquartered in Hubei
Often referred to as Lyric Poetry
Duì Chǔ Wáng Wèn对楚王问Replying to the Chu King’s Questions
Dòngtíng Lake洞庭湖Lake in northern Hunan…it divides Hunan from Hubei
Another kind of poetry combined with rose
Guǎfew or scant
Gāohigh or lofty
Gāo Chǎnggōng高长恭Gao was a general in the Northern Qi and also a handsome devil
Gǔdài Sìdà Měinán古代四大美男the four most handsome men in Ancient China
to join in the singing or to chime in
Kūn fishA huge legendary fish which could change into a roc (鹏)
Mìluó River汨罗江River in northern Hunan where Qu Yuan drowned himself
Pān Ān潘安 (也潘岳)the Western Jin literary great and one of the four good lookin’ guys from ancient China along with……
Qín秦国The Qin State of the Ying Family…they were the ones to defeat all the Warring States
Qū Yuán屈原Great poet, patriot and upright official. His suicide in 278BCE inspired the Dragon Boat Festival
song, a kind of sung poetry
Qǔ Gāo Hè Guǎ曲高和寡If the tune is too highbrow no one will sing along
ShīAnother kind of poetry
Sòng Yù宋玉a handsome official and literary great (too great for his own good perhaps)
Wèi Jiè卫玠Jin dynasty official. Fifty women knockin’ on his door!
Yáng Chūn Bái Xǔe阳春白雪Sunny Spring and White Snow – a big hit from ancient China

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Previous

S2E02 | I Can’t Get it Out of my Head! | 余音绕梁

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S1E10 | Betting the Bank | 孤注一掷