
Kenneth Gorelick (born June 5, 1956 in Seattle) is an American singer and musician.
Since his debut, Kenny G has created a total of nine albums that have dominated the national contemporary jazz chart and reached the top 10 of the pop album chart, with 24 lyric chart top 40 singles, and the cumulative sales of albums, singles and music videos over the years have also exceeded 75 million, he is the best-selling performance music artist in the history of pop music, and he is also the best-selling pop music musician of our time. Kenny G's extraordinary talent earned him a Grammy Award, a National Music Award, a Soul Train Award, and a World Music Award.
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Introduction to circulating breathing:
Circular Breathing is a technique used to play an instrument. To send air to the blowing mouth of the blowing instrument, the musician breathes through the nose in order to uninterrupted the airflow and not to interrupt the coherence of a set of notes by breathing.
The earliest circulatory breathing came from China, when the Shaanxi whistleblowers liked to take a breath with their mouths, and then squeeze the air into the mouth through the drum cheeks, while inhaling the air, ensuring that the music was coherent when blowing, just like a stringed instrument.
At the end of the nineteenth century, Mr. Johann Strauss jokingly said in a speech that he wanted to invent a drumming device, when a person needed to breathe, he would step on the device with his feet, and drum the air into the instrument, so that the music would continue, like strings, but it has never been possible. Later, American performers first discovered the Chinese circulatory breathing method and developed it into wind music.
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In terms of black pipes, Robert Spring is a well-known master of circulating breathing. There is also Mr. Li Changyun of China, who has forged ahead in spite of difficulties and has become the first person to develop China's black tube circulatory breathing.
Mr. Kenniki went to China for several performances in the early 2000s, when everyone marveled that Kenniki played the saxophone for a minute without breathing, but in fact he used circulating breathing.