Tuesday, September 23, 2025

What Does China Sound Like to You? The Oriental Riff and more! (pt. 1 - Europe)

     Heyo! I promised I'd post something more academic next time and I'm holding true to that. This is a topic I've covered three times now in my life, first time for a high school paper and second time for a student symposium last semester, but I CAN'T STOP because this is just such a fascinating niche to me and I want to nerd out about it to as many people as possible. In all likelihood I'll be revisiting it several more times, delving into specific composers and franchises to see how they handle it. For now, I'm just going to be retooling the symposium piece into a couple blog posts. No more shaking the bottle, let's twist the cap and get into it!

    I'd like to start by asking a question: have you ever heard this tune?

    This melody is called the Oriental Riff, and chances are it's crossed your path before. And if you're from America, England, France, Japan, or any other country steeped in Western music theory, it means one thing: China. For some it might more broadly represent Asia or the general idea of The East, but at least for me these nine chords are enough to transport me straight to the Middle Kingdom with a cup of green tea in hand.

    At least, to a fantasy version of it. Because that's what the Oriental Riff is: a fantasy. It's the frontman for a whole collection of tropes crafted by Western musicians to represent China in their work. And over the next three or so posts, I'm going to give a basic overview of where they came from and where they are now.

Chinoiserie and Cinesi - The China of Europe

    To recount the entire history of Sino-European relations would take far more space (and research time) than I've got, so I'm going to be very breezy and begin in the mid-seventeenth century. This period marks the first widespread Western attempt to mimic Chinese art, sparked by the growth of direct trade with the Qing dynasty. Unlike prior centuries, when trade with China was accomplished through lengthy chains of middlemen and direct cultural contact was done mostly by Jesuit missionaries, better navigation and shifting legislation allowed more Europeans a firsthand, if still heavily restricted, peek into the country's culture and arts. And what they saw was equal parts inspiring and ungraspable.

    Nothing more clearly illuminates this budding dual conception than the aesthetic which spawned in its wake: chinoiserie. Chinoiserie is a genre of psuedo-Chinese styled works based on European artists' approximations of what Eastern life was supposedly like. Its popularity stretched to the mediums of painting, pottery, textiles, and more.

    Encountering these pieces as a modern viewer, there's something deeply uncanny about them, at least to me. Not to say they're unpleasant, far from it, but everything from the blockily-colored pottery to the bathrobe-looking hanfu betrays an artist vaguely guessing at their muses in the absence of a full understanding. They're just... off.

    But that vagueness, that off-ness is in some ways crucial to the aesthetic's ethos. To these artists, China was vague. It was a fairy tale kingdom with wishy-washy ideas of authority, a land of beautiful women, strange creatures, and many bizarre but harmless customs. Even if perfect information on Chinese life with all its bureaucracy and brutalities was available, its inclusion would muddle the mystique.

    In his 2001 book, Ideographia: The Chinese Cipher in Early Modern Europe, professor David Porter characterizes chinoiserie as both a flattening and delegitimization of Chinese society, as a "delicious surrender to the unremitting exoticism of total illegibility." In simpler terms: China wasn't meant to be understood or taken seriously, but to simply look pretty.

    Porter's book is interesting and slightly humorous to me, because reading it you get the sense that he really hates chinoiserie, in an almost insulted way. And he makes a convincing case that it was indeed insulting. By comparing early Western illustrations of Chinese court, where the emperor was surrounded by soldiers, to later ones, where he participates in ostentatious ground-level parties, he demonstrates the rapid decline in China's perceived authority and power. Personally, I can't help but wonder if some artists employed this delegitimization less as an insult and more for escapism's sake, as a gate into a world not governed by the strict protocols of upper-class European life. But the point stands that chinoiserie was a genre of fantasy, not historical realism.

    As a brief final note before moving on, don't let it escape your notice that this defanging is deeply coupled with an infusion of femininity. The perception of the Chinese as hyper-feminine, along with the ever-pervasive tendency to pair femininity with weakness and insignificance, is going to come up a lot as we move forward.

Musical Chinoiserie    

    You might say - okay, that’s art. But what does this have to do with music? While chinoiserie was most prominent in the visual arts, there grew alongside it a smaller phenomenon of “musical chinoiserie”¹ among Western art composers², and it is here that our modern idea of Chinese-style music first begins to take shape. Like with painting and pottery, this music leaned hard into the perception of China as a mystical, near-utopian landscape, with customs Europeans couldn’t understand but could certainly enjoy imagining from afar.

    Famed composer Claude Debussy was a rather prominent force in this genre, having drawn inspiration from various Asian sources (and secondhand European ones) in his work. The earliest of these works, an unpublished piece called Rondel Chinois, was based upon a French poem of the same name. The adapted lyrics fit right into the chinoiserie style outlined above, describing a beautiful Chinese garden, complete with a beautiful Chinese lady, in hazy snips of detail. Though he had never been to the country at that point, this description provided fertile enough ground for the active composer’s imagination.

    On the other side of the art music coin from concerts were operas, which could employ lyrical, musical, and visual devices all at once to draw audiences into the creator's otherworldly vision of the Far East. Once such Opera was Cristoph Gluck’s 1754 Le Cinesi, which used the ostentation associated with Chinese nobility as a reference to and critique of the growing garishness of dress in the Western courts of Austria.


    But that only describes the content of these works, the cultural connotations and extra-musical elements which gave them their meaning. What of their forms, the actual musical techniques which conveyed this “Chinese” flavor? In other words - how does this music sound, and why? To answer that question, one must first look at how early European analyses of native Chinese music were conducted.
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    One crucial early analysist was Joseph-Marie Amiot, a French Jesuit who worked as an intellectual intermediary between 18th century Europe and the Qing Dynasty and is widely regarded as the first European to supply public knowledge on the native music. In works like “Mémoire sur la musique des anciens” and “Mémoire de la musique des Chinois,” he provides his best analysis of Chinese musical systems, slotting them into the existing systems of Western music theory. According to ethnomusicologist Meredith Schweig, Amiot is the originator of the idea of a “Chinese Air,” a unified and largely homogenous sound essential to all music made within the country. He is also perhaps the earliest scholar to spread the idea that the Chinese primarily use a pentatonic, or five-note scale. This idea was expanded on by commentators on his work, such as music theorist Jean-Phillepe Ramaeu when he says “(they) want only five tones in their , which apparently means system, scale, or mode."

    A later but similar treatise was Belgian writer and later Qing Bureaucrat J.A. Van Aalst’s “Chinese Music,” published in 1884. In it, he sought to give “a short yet concise account” of Chinese music and compare it to that of Europe. He described modern Chinese music as following a 7 note scale matching the Western C major scale, but stating that “practically, they only use five,” creating a pentatonic scale. He claimed that the Chinese don’t have any form of accidentals, sharps and flats, but “remain faithful to the pentatonic scale.” He also outlined a chromatic scale that lines up with the Western one, despite the admission that several notes are quite flat.

    Analyses like these, grounded in the idea that there is some essentially “Chinese” sound which existed as a subset of existing Western musical ideas, set the precedent for how musicians create the new Chinese musical identity in their work. The first and most notable element of this new identity was a heavy use of pentatonicism, meaning a focus on the five-note scale Amiot and Van Aalst outlined above (you may recognize this as the black notes on a piano). Even today it remains perhaps the most prevalent and enduring device in this entire genre. Personally speaking, it seemed to be a common practice in my Southern childhood to sit and noodle on the black keys of the piano and claim (or have an adult claim for you) that you were playing “Asian music.” Take a listen to Debussy's Pagodes for a good early example of this device in action:


    Parallel 4ths and 5ths, when a 4th or 5th interval is followed by another of that same interval, are another common trope. Both of these arise from those early analyses of Chinese music, but also in the perception of these intervals as foreign and unusual. Parallel 5ths especially are considered “incorrect” in Western harmony, directionless and mysterious just like a classic chinoiserie scene, so their inclusion is perfect to give a piece a non-Western feel.

    Miscellaneous elements include repeated sixteenth notes. These repeated notes, especially in groups of 4, may have originated from composer’s attempts to replicate the perceived simplicity and noisiness of Chinese music, or the tremolo often used on traditional string instruments. An element with a similar origin is grace notes, small and short notes that accessorize a melody. These may have become popular as a way to emulate the “twanginess” of Chinese instruments such as the pipa, a Chinese lute.

    Note that though these elements were present in European music, they were usually diluted by the local demands and traditions of Western music. It was later in America when these tropes would truly calcify, transforming from vague dreaminess to cartoonish specificity. And it's there they'd combine into that archetypical melody highlighted above: the Oriental Riff.

    I'll be getting into that chapter next post! If this was at all interesting to you, please let me know so I know to work on the next part faster! Thanks for reading <3


1. Term coined by Angela Kang in her titular work.

2. "Art composer/music" here refer to upper-class genres of music which received the bulk of professional study, theory, and funding, as opposed to popular or folk music.


You can find my sources for this series here.

Monday, July 7, 2025

The Worst How-to-Draw-Manga Book Ever (yes, worse than that one)

     Apologies for starting off the blog with something rather clickbait-y. Most of my posts will be more informative, but I thought it'd be fun to lead with something lighthearted. Besides, this is a book I've wanted to share with the world for over a year now, and it's just on-topic enough to do so. So let's pop the tab and get into it, shall we?

Hey Kid, Wanna Draw Some Manga?

    If you were (or are) a creative child with an interest in Japanese media, chances are you've tried your hand at mimicking the typical "anime" art style at least once. But it's a confusing world out there for a clumsy-handed kid, with so many stylistic strata to draw inspiration from. Who will help steady that pencil and give you the guidance you need to start off strong?

    The correct answer is YouTube, but the answer many internet-deprived children received instead was the assortment of how-to-draw books published alongside the rise of Western weeb fandoms. These books varied wildly in the quality of both their instruction and the art itself. We've all seen the images by now...



    Don't let the easily memeable books warp your perception too much; there are a lot of quality anime and manga tutorial books out there. Most have much better art, and some manage to overcome the limits of their medium and impart that artistic knowledge onto the reader. But that's probably not too surprising, is it? Of course art books can get better than these.

    But is it possible for them to get worse?

    What if instead of poor art, the book contains next to none? What if instead of an amateur artist, it appears to have been authored by a total non-artist? What if instead of a charmingly ugly cover image, it has a completely stolen one?

    I can tell you, because I bought it. Let's take a look inside and learn to draw!

    (Oh and in case you're wondering, this has nothing to do with AI. Just wanted to get that out of the way so we can have fun here.)

First Impressions

    "How to Draw Manga: Improve at Manga Drawings in 60 Minutes - A Step-by-Step Manga Drawing Tutorial" (huff... puff...) was published as an eBook in 2017 by author Grace Clark. The first thing that sticks out about it, at least to me, is the cover. It's a striking illustration, which through attention to detail gives an impressive amount of depth to an otherwise dull expression.

    It's also completely stolen.

    If you're a Vocaloid fan like me, you probably recognized this as the illustration for noripy's song "Butterfly on My Right Shoulder," at least, a lineart-only version of it. But hold up, the artist for that piece's name is Akiakane, not Grace Clark. So what’s that all about? I couldn’t find any mention of a Grace Clark manga artist online besides this book, and Akiakane doesn’t list anything about it on her website (at least, she didn't last year when her website was still accessible).

    Two possibilities came to mind when I was first confronted with this conundrum of a cover: either the illustration was stolen and used without the artist's permission, or it was simply licensed in order to pass it off as this mysterious Ms. Clark's own work. That or Akiakane was moonlighting as an obscure white lady on the Barnes and Noble website. The speculation proved too much for my fragile frame to bear and I gave in, forking over $4.95 to see what lay beyond the surface.

    The answer was... not much.

    My first impression upon opening "How to Draw Manga: Improve whatever whatever" by Grace Clark was holy crap this thing is short. I can scroll through the whole thing with just a slide of my trackpad. Counting the covers, there’s only twenty-four pages to sift through. For comparison, the other drawing books on my shelf all have between sixty and two-hundred pages. And this is a big font too, we’re talking like two to three paragraphs per page. In terms of word count, this book has as much content as your average finals paper.

    But that’s not a huge deal for a drawing book, right? Obviously, the main attraction here is the visuals. Some really quality diagrams or demonstrations could easily compensate for the lack of verbal content. So how are those looking?

    In short- they're not. Not counting the cover illustration, there are nine visuals in this entire book. And when I say visuals, I don’t mean the full-page spreads you’ll see in other art books. I mean small little squares lazily plopped onto a Google Doc. These visuals include and are limited to:

A photo of a manga panel

Two photos of different artists

Three visuals from mangatutorials.com

A diagram from www.drawpaint.com

A diagram from howtodrawanim.blogspot.com [sic]

And a diagram from crunchyroll.com

(PS - if the images are hard to read, give 'em a click/download)

    You may notice that out of these nine, none of them are credited to Grace Clark. It’s no wonder I couldn’t find any manga artists by that name, because it doesn’t seem like she’s even an artist! At least she credits those image sources while using their work in her for-profit book. There’s no mention of Akiakane anywhere, confirming my suspicion that this cover art was stolen for the purposes of passing it off as the sort of instruction you’ll get from Ms. Clark herself. The failure to demonstrate any of her own artistic skill doesn't give much reason to trust the already paltry written content, does it?

    The author seemed to have anticipated this incredulity and came ready with an inspiring introduction. I recommend you read the following in your therapist's voice for an ideal experience:

    The ending of this introduction promises that "you're going to learn so much and gain so much valuable knowledge!" Well, good enough for me. I'm not getting that $4.95 back anyway.

10 Easy Tips To Make Your Rival Mangaka Hate You!!

    Chapter one is titled "Ten Quick and Easy Tips for Improving your Manga Drawing Skills," and consists of just that. They're weirdly lumped into arbitrary paragraphs, but I'm going to go ahead and put them in bulleted list form:

    1.) Study anatomy and how to draw the basic human body. 

    Starting off with the hard-hitting, mercilessly insightful advice. Learning to draw is, in fact, an important part of learning to draw. Jokes aside, this is a common thing I see in art tutorials and tip compilations: just telling people to learn anatomy. Like, yeah, that's obviously a useful thing to do, but I wouldn't call it a useful piece of advice. Obviously learning will help me improve, aren't you supposed to be helping me do that? Whatever.

    2.) Use lots of references.

    3.) Don't be afraid to use guidelines.

    4.) Take inspiration from many different artists.

    5.) Be open to criticism.

    6.) Don't listen to your friends and family.

    Wait, what? Okay, I get what she means to say here, but that phrasing is so funny. It's true that your loved ones probably won't be as brutally honest about your work as strangers might, but straight up don't listen to them? Seems like a slight overreaction. Sometimes my mom or my friends telling me my work is beautiful gives me the motivation I need to keep trying, even if I know it isn't as good as they say. The world of strangers is a cold and uncaring one, man...

    8.) Avoid taking shortcuts and skipping things you don't like to draw.

    Hold up- eight? I thought we were on seven. I guess we're just... skipping that one. Alright.

    10.) Don't draw the same things over and over.

    Number TEN? I thought we were on nine- or, eight rather. How did we skip TWO NUMBERS? There are EIGHT tips in the chapter titled "Ten Quick and Easy Tips for Improving your Manga Drawing Skills." I don't understand why this is. Just say eight, I'm not gonna get mad if you only advertise eight. I guess that explains the weird paragraph structure; it's probably meant to obscure the two phantom numbers in the shuffle.

    The advice itself is fine. Some of it won't apply to certain artists depending on their goals, but it's all fairly solid advice most online artists have heard dozens of times before. Except maybe the "ignore your family" one, that one's new to me.

Make it Make Sense

    If the first chapter is straightforward, mundane yet perfectly intelligible advice, the following few are anything but. Devoid of visuals, they take the doomed route of trying to teach you to draw entirely through text. And rather confused text at that. Take this anatomy tutorial, delivered in that same paragraphs-as-list format we grew to love last chapter:

    Not only do these instructions rely 0n you guessing the exact placement of body parts, it complicates the matter further by defining those parts in completely different ways. At first the waist is "where you would usually find the belly button," i.e. the stomach. Then two sentences later it's "where the legs and hips of a person come together," more like the hips. Why call those the same thing at all; just say "stomach" and "hips!"

    It doesn't help that this overview jumps around the body in a seemingly random order. First the belly button, then the elbow down to the arms, then the legs, then the "already finished head." It almost feels like it expects you to have a fully-drawn body which you are now making anatomical adjustments to. Tip one, I'm sorry I mocked you before. I would like to study anatomy. Anywhere else.

    The other walkthroughs aren't much easier to follow. Grab a pen and see if you can puzzle out how this mouth is supposed to look:

   
    If your eyes started drooping like our friend Ariel's up there, I don't blame you. It feels like trying to chart a parabola without graph paper. And hey, maybe you're good at geometry and these instructions worked out for you. You have my eternal admiration. I still think we can agree some step-by-step visual aids would be appropriate here.

Conclusion

    The book concludes by telling us all the things we've surely learned at this point. "Chances are, right now, you're feeling accomplished, relieved and very informed!" it says.

    Well, it isn't totally wrong. I feel slightly accomplished nearing the end of my first real blog post, and relieved I don't have to read this book anymore. But I feel informed too. I've been informed that just because the West's familiarity with and skill at replicating manga has increased doesn't mean there aren't those who will try and take advantage of those new to the hobby. I don't know if Grace Clark is an artist, or if she even actually exists, but I hope if she ever tries publishing again she'll be brave enough to use her own work. And maybe give my $4.95 to Akiakane.

    In conclusion, I rate this book 10/8 stars. Thanks for reading. 💜


Shoutout to Nocti, whose music I listened to while writing this! Check out her stellar Touhou albums here~

A Brief Introduction

    Heyo! If you're reading this, chances are you already know me, either from one of my art pages or real life. But just in case, I'm DndManatee (or Con if you want to be friends), a 19-year-old history major, artist, writer, and vocal synth enthusiast from the United States. Here's my Instagram if you'd rather look at cute anime girls instead of all these words.

    I've started this blog to express nonfiction interests of mine usually kept offline. My future ambition (fingers crossed) is to be become a historian and educational media creator, with a particular focus on various Asian cultures and their intersection with the Western world. If that sounds kinda boring and academic, don't worry. Right now I'm just a teenager who likes to nerd out about Asian media.

   Most of the content I write will be rather casual and cursory, summarizing a subject or work and its cross-cultural impacts. Sometimes I'll talk about something funny like a terrible how-to-draw-manga book (spoilers), and other times I'll talk about more serious things like the history of Chinese stereotypes (also spoilers). I'm no professional, but like a good student I will make sure and cite my sources~

   I have no plans to keep a consistent posting schedule; posts will come out as I'm inspired and prepared to write them. That said, if you'd like to grant me some extra inspiration, go ahead and uh... subscribe, I think? Comment? I'm new to Blogspot lol, just do whatever you need to do. And thank you very much for reading! 

What Does China Sound Like to You? The Oriental Riff and more! (pt. 1 - Europe)

      Heyo! I promised I'd post something more academic next time and I'm holding true to that. This is a topic I've covered thr...