pansori

Korean music
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://www.britannica.com/art/pansori
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Also known as: Korean folk opera
Sometimes called:
Korean folk opera

pansori, a traditional genre of Korean narrative song, typically performed dramatically by a vocalist accompanied by a buk (double-headed barrel drum). Built from the word pan, meaning “open space,” and sori, meaning “singing” or “sound,” the term pansori itself is a reference to the markets, public squares, and other such open venues where performances originally took place.

With a fan in hand, a pansori singer uses a combination of chang (song), sasol (narration), and ballim (dramatic gesture) to tell a story. Meanwhile, the drummer provides the appropriate rhythmic setting for each song. A considerable amount of improvised interaction occurs between the drummer and the vocalist throughout the performance.

Repertoire

Only 5 of an original 12 madang, or song cycles, are still performed in the 21st century. These madang address a variety of topics.

The Chunhyangga (“The Song of Chunhyang”) cycle is a tale of love between an upper-class man and the lower-class daughter of a kisaeng (female entertainer), while the Simcheongga (“The Song of Simcheong”) cycle is the story of a woman who sacrifices herself in order to help her blind father regain his eyesight.

The satiric and witty madang Sugungga (“The Song of the Underwater Palace”) recounts the exploits of a hare in a sea kingdom. In a more serious vein, the Heungbuga (“The Song of Heungbu”) cycle concerns a brotherhood struggle between good and evil, and Cheokbyeokga (“The Song of the Red Cliff”)—a madang based on the 14th-century Chinese novel Sanguozhi yanyi (Romance of the Three Kingdoms), attributed to Luo Guanzhong—depicts the famous Battle of Cheokbyeok (or Chibi [“Red Cliff”]) during the Chinese Three Kingdoms period (220–280 ce).

Young girl wearing a demin jacket playing the trumpet (child, musical instruments, Asian ethnicity)
Britannica Quiz
Sound Check: Musical Vocabulary Quiz

The performance style of the current five song cycles has changed significantly since the advent of the genre, as pansori singers have adapted the repertoire, both to suit their own singing styles and to satisfy audience expectations. Singers tend to enhance the most popular segments of the cycle while radically reducing the less-engaging passages. Moreover, they rarely perform any one pansori cycle in its entirety—a feat that would likely span 8 to 10 hours. Rather, singers typically select only certain episodes, often using them to create new sections or variations, called deoneum. While these deoneum inevitably contain textual adaptations, they also often incorporate changes to the rhythmic and melodic framework, which may alter the mood of the cycle (or cycle segment) as a whole. Historically, some deoneum developed identities of their own and separated from their original song cycles and, ultimately, gave birth not only to new pansori repertoires but also to new genres in other areas of the literary and performing arts. For example, writers began to compose novels that were specially suited for delivery through the pansori medium. Innovative pansori songs became independent music, and the dramatic element of pansori spawned a new, more extensively theatrical genre called changgeuk.

Musical features

Melody

The term jo generally refers to the melodic framework—the mode or melody type—of a pansori performance (although the term may also be used to describe other aspects of singing). Most of the pansori repertoire is cast in one of three principal melodic modes: kyemyeonjo, ujo, or pyeongjo. All these modes use an anhemitonic pentatonic scale (i.e., a five-pitch scale without semitones—e.g., e-g-a-c-d-e), with a distinctive contour and central (fundamental) pitch. Within each mode, each pitch has a unique character, which is reinforced through frequency of use as well as through conventions of ornamentation and approach. The modes also carry emotional associations that ultimately help to reinforce the potency of the narrative. Kyemyeonjo radiates a feeling of pathos, ujo creates an atmosphere of magnificence and vigor, and pyeongjo embodies a sense of serenity.

Get Unlimited Access
Try Britannica Premium for free and discover more.

Rhythm

The various metric frameworks of pansori are called jangdan. Each jangdan is distinguished by the number and subdivision of beats within a metric unit, by the pattern of accents, and by general tempo specifications. Like the melodic modes, the meters employed in pansori are evocative of particular emotional states. Some jangdan, for instance, project a mood of lamentation, while others depict enjoyment, agony, or suspense. The appearance of certain characters—such as mythical creatures—in the story’s plot also is accompanied by specific jangdan. Different meters also mark narrative or lyrical passages, as well as the explanatory remarks that conclude a performance.

Vocal quality

The pitch range of pansori usually spans some two and a half octaves. In the lower and middle ranges, singers use a husky vocal quality, called sori seong, produced by tensing the vocal cords while pushing the diaphragm upward. Because it is difficult to maintain this quality in the upper registers, performers typically employ falsetto techniques to reach and project the higher pitches. Certain vocal qualities, most notably a nasal tone and excessive vibrato, are considered unattractive in the pansori tradition. Similarly, extreme clarity of sound—which is perceived as superficial—and an overly harsh tone are avoided.

Styles and schools of performance

The term je refers broadly to the regional styles or schools of pansori that have developed over the course of the tradition’s history, owing largely to the creativity of a handful of renowned 19th-century performers. These styles generally can be grouped into three categories: dongpyeonje (“east-side singing school”), seopyeonje (“west-side singing school”), and junggoje (“middle-high singing school”). Dongpyeonje is associated with the eastern Jeolla region (in southwestern South Korea) and particularly with the singers Song Heung-Nok, Jeong Chun-Pung, and Kim Sejong. Hallmarks of the style include a deep controlled voice that is projected directly from the abdomen, an emphasis on the vigorous ujo melodic mode, a straightforward rhythmic character, and a specialization in the Heungbuga, Sugungga, and Jeokbyeokga song cycles. Seopyeonje refers to a style from the western part of the Jeolla region that was created and propagated in the late 19th century by the singer Park Yujeon. It is highly ornamented (both melodically and rhythmically), focuses on the sorrowful kyemyeon melodic mode, and concentrates on the Chunhyangga and Simcheongga song cycles. Junggoje was pioneered in the late 19th century by the performer Kim Seongok in the Chungcheong region, to the north of Jeolla; this school of pansori had virtually disappeared by the early 20th century.