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QT0467 Bells

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7 piece - Version I 
Sizes:  32cm, 28cm, 24cm, 20cm, 16cm, 12cm, 8cm high.  Price $1,700.00   FOB from Shanghai
11 Pieces - Version II 
Sizes:  40cm, 37cm, 34cm, 31cm, 28cm, 25cm, 22cm, 19cm, 16cm, 13cm, 10cm high.  Price $3,000.00     FOB from Shanghai
26 Pieces - Version III
Sizes:  Largest is 60 cm high the smallest 20cm High $7,000.00    FOB Shanghai
65 Pieces - Version IV
Total weight of 6500 kg.  Approximately 12 meters in length and 300 cm high. 
- ask for price

 

 

A wooden beam in version 2 and 3 is available.

These are reproductions of  the famous Bianzhong bells, which were unearthed in 1978, in Hubei Province. Archaeologists discovered the bells in the 2,400 year old tomb of ‘Marquis’ Yi along with a 125-piece orchestra and 25 musicians.

The set of bells range in size from 8 inches to 5 feet tall and weigh a total of five tons.  The bells were precisely cast from a composite of 12.5% tin, 2% lead, and the remainder of copper.

What is scientifically interesting about the bells is that two distinct sounds can be obtained by striking two different nodal points. The concave shape of the bottom focuses the sound waves; and the bosses on the surface, which are more prominent on the originals, also help isolate the competing sounds.

The bells are preserved today in a humidity-controller chamber at Hubei’s Provincial Museum and guarded by 30 soldiers. They were played in Hong Kong’s new Convention Centre on July 4, 1997 in concert composed by Tan Dun. The concert is based on the poetry of Li Po, with the bells symbolizing the past and a children’s choir and the Asian Youth Orchestra musicians symbolizing the future.

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