More than three thousand years ago, musicians in ancient China were already doing something that wouldn’t appear in European instruments for centuries: playing multiple notes at once from a single handheld wind instrument. The sheng — a mouth-blown instrument made of vertical pipes fitted with free reeds — represents one of the earliest known examples of polyphony built into an instrument’s physical design.
What the evidence shows
- Sheng depictions: Images of the sheng or sheng-like instruments have been dated to around 1100 B.C.E., making it among the oldest documented Chinese instruments.
- Bone oracle inscriptions: Chinese free-reed instruments named sheng and yu appear in bone oracle writings from the 14th to 12th centuries B.C.E., offering some of the earliest textual evidence for the instrument.
- Archaeological finds: Physical instruments have been recovered from the tomb of the Marquis Yi of Zeng (around 433 B.C.E.) in present-day Hubei province, and from Han dynasty tombs at Mawangdui (around the 2nd century B.C.E.) in Hunan province.
How the sheng actually works
The sheng is played by blowing — or drawing — air through a mouthpiece into a wind chamber, from which multiple vertical pipes rise. Each pipe contains a small free reed that vibrates at a fixed pitch when its finger hole is covered. When the hole is open, the pipe stays silent.
This design means a musician can sound two or three notes simultaneously, a feature baked into the instrument itself rather than achieved through technique alone. Traditional performance style typically adds a fifth or octave above the main melody note, giving the sheng a natural harmonic richness that set it apart from most instruments of its era.
Players can also sustain sound almost without interruption by alternating between exhaling and inhaling — the same principle used in the harmonica, an instrument that would not appear in the West until the 19th century C.E. The sheng, in other words, solved several acoustic problems that took other musical traditions millennia to address.
A living tradition, not a relic
The sheng did not stay frozen in its ancient form. When an 8th-century C.E. Japanese imperial delegation received three yu and three sheng from China, those instruments — 17-piped, with a long curving mouthpiece — were preserved in the Shōsōin imperial repository in Nara, Japan, where they remain. They look remarkably similar to instruments in use today.
Across East and Southeast Asia, the sheng gave rise to an entire family of related free-reed instruments. The khaen of Laos and northeastern Thailand, the sho of Japan, and the saenghwang of Korea all trace their design lineage to the same ancient Chinese principle. This was not borrowing in a passive sense — each culture adapted the instrument to its own musical grammar, tonal systems, and ritual contexts.
In the 20th century C.E., Chinese musicians and instrument makers undertook a systematic redesign of the sheng. Zheng Jinwen (1872–1935) expanded the pipe count to 32, widening its harmonic range. Later innovators added metal tubes, keys, and levers, making the instrument fully chromatic and loud enough for large concert halls. Today the sheng family spans soprano, alto, tenor, and bass variants — a complete orchestral section built on a 3,000-year-old blueprint.
A bridge between musical worlds
The sheng’s influence on Western music is less commonly acknowledged but historically significant. When European missionaries and travelers brought sheng instruments to Europe — possibly as early as the 1700s C.E., and perhaps earlier — instrument makers there encountered the free-reed principle for what may have been one of the first times. Scholars have traced a line of influence from the sheng to the development of the harmonica, the accordion, and the concertina — all free-reed instruments that would go on to define entire genres of Western folk and popular music.
Non-Chinese composers have also engaged with the sheng directly. Unsuk Chin, Lou Harrison, Jukka Tiensuu, and others have written works that feature the sheng as a solo or chamber instrument, often drawn to its capacity for sustained, layered tone that is difficult to produce on any Western instrument.
Meanwhile, ethnomusicologists have documented the sheng’s continued role in kunqu opera, northern Chinese wind and percussion ensembles, and the modern Chinese orchestra — contexts that stretch from ancient ritual to contemporary concert performance.
Lasting impact
The sheng’s most durable contribution may be conceptual: the idea that polyphony — harmony, chords, simultaneous voices — could be embedded in a single portable instrument, rather than requiring multiple players or a large structure like an organ. That idea, originating in China more than three thousand years ago, quietly reshaped the physics of music-making wherever it traveled.
The free-reed principle the sheng pioneered now underpins instruments played by hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Every time someone plays a harmonica on a street corner or an accordion at a wedding, they are, in a sense, continuing a tradition that began in ancient China.
The sheng also stands as evidence of the depth and sophistication of early Chinese musical culture — a tradition that developed complex acoustic engineering, notational systems, and ensemble practice long before it entered the consciousness of Western music history.
Blindspots and limits
The written and archaeological record of the sheng is richer than for many ancient instruments, but it still leaves significant gaps. We do not know who invented the sheng, under what circumstances, or whether it emerged from a single location or developed in parallel across different regions. The bone oracle inscriptions name the instrument but tell us almost nothing about how it was played, taught, or transmitted. The communities — farmers, ritual specialists, traveling musicians — who carried the sheng through its earliest centuries remain largely unnamed in the historical record.
It is also worth noting that the line of influence from sheng to European free-reed instruments, while plausible and widely discussed, is not fully proven. Some musicologists argue that parallel invention cannot be ruled out, and that the timeline of transmission to Europe remains contested.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Sheng (instrument)
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights at COP30: 160 million hectares recognized
- The Good News for Humankind archive on ancient history
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