Collection erhu with special designed bian bajiao (oval sharped octagon, 扁八角) resonator.
Materials: Red sandalwood.
Five free online lessons after purchasing
If you want to get a high quality erhu, this is a good choice.
Maker: famous master erhu maker Wang Guoxing (王国兴), Gold Award Winner of Erhu maker in China. He doesn't like decorated painting, poem etc. on his high-grade works, he said "Good instruments, don't need these, musicians need good sound."
Accessories: the erhu is coming with a hard case, rosin, bridge, and strings.
Introduction to the Erhu (from ww.melodyofchina.com): The instrument also takes the name of huqin, the full term for hu. Its early ancestor was generally known as xiqin (string instrument of a Mongolian tribe called the Xi) in tenth century. Now as an important solo instrument for the recital hall, it is appropriate both for deep tragedy and for the momentum of an avalanche. Besides, it also assumes a central position in the modern Chinese orchestra, as well as in the accompaniment of singing, dancing, and traditional operas. Under the influence of the regularly trained musician Liu Tianhua (1895-1932) and the local minstrel Hua Yanjun (known as Blind Man Ah Bing, 1895-1950) during the 1920's, the erhu developed into a solo instrument. Its two strings are generally tuned a fifth apart and its range can reach three or four octaves. Playing techniques are rich for both hands, including vibratos, harmonic tones, trills, glissando, pizzicato for the left hand and legatos, detaches, martellatos, saltandos, tremolos, flying staccatos for the right hand. Tuning: d1-a1 The best range is from d1 to a2; from a2 to d3, this sound of the range is soft, up is not so well.