Posts in Portamento
Huáyīn 滑音 “Sliding Sound”

The general term for a pitch slide. Press a string with the left hand. Before or after that press, pluck the same string with the right hand.

The speed of the slide and its placement relative to the beat vary. To paraphrase from Kwok: If the slide comes before the principal pitch, the glide comes on the beat similar to a grace note. If the glide follows the principal pitch, it usually comes near or at the end of the indicated note duration.

Xiàhuá yīn 下滑音 “Downward Slide”
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Press a string to the required pitch, pluck the string, the relax the pressure to create a downward slide. May be abbreviated as Xiàhuá 下滑. Ferguson offers the variant Xiàhuá yǐ yīn 下滑倚音 (4) which translates to “Downward Appoggiatura”. It is used for faster rhythms, often as a grace note.

Ferguson also offers Qián huáyīn 前滑音 from Source C but doesn’t offer a description.

Huí huáyīn 回滑音 “Returning Slide”
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The general term for a slide from one pitch to a second and then back. Kao offers two with this name:

Huiyin 1: Pluck a string, press it in with the left hand, and then relax the left hand, creating an up-down slide.

Huiyin 2: Pluck a string, press it in with the left hand, relax the left hand, and then press it again, creating an up-down-up slide. May be abbreviated to just huí 回.

Shàng huí huáyīn上回滑音 "Upward Returning Slide"
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Pluck then slowly press a string at the same time to slide to the next higher note, then slowly relax the left hand for a returning downward slide. Ferguson offers two variants of this: Tèshū huáyīn 特殊滑音 “Extraordinary Slide”, a slow version, and gāo huízhuǎn huáyīn 髙回转滑音 (trad. 髙回轉滑音) “High Returning Slide”, A fast version played in half the time. Kao offers the Henan term Shuāng huáyīn 双滑音 “Double Slide”.

Xiàhuí huáyīn 下回滑音 “Downward Returning Slide”
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The inverse of Shàng huí huáyīn. Press a string first. Pluck the string, relax the left hand at the same time, then press the left hand for a returning, upward slide. Ferguson offers another name for this, Dī huízhuǎn huáyīn 低回转滑音 (trad. 低回轉滑音) “Low Returning Slide”. Kao offers the Henan term Sù huáyīn 速滑音 “Fast Slide”.

Alternate notation:

Bō yīn 波音 “Mordent” or Lián yīn 漣音 “Rippling Sound”
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Pluck a string then a moment later, press the string to raise the pitch 1-3 half steps and release it. This creates a rapid alternation around a target pitch, known is western music as a mordent. It is a fast technique performed on shorter notes such as eighth or sixteenth notes. Kwok considers it a vibrato, offers the synonym shuanq rouyin and says the strong should be pressed twice.

Náo 猱 “Brisk and Nimble”
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A type of returning portamento. Pluck a string then bend it to slide down-up-down or, bend a string then pluck it for an up-down-up series of slides. To quote Han 2013: “Nao is very effective in expressing gentle, sad, or elegant emotions. Although it is used in all styles, southern styles are particularly famous for applying it.” It is meant to evoke the motions of a type of monkey, a secondary meaning of the character.