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Music of Japan

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Famous piece for koto: Rokudan ('Six Sections' ... Requires two musicians: singer/narrator (tayu) and shamisen player (in past, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Music of Japan


1
Music of Japan
2
Overview
  • RegionEast Asia
  • Consists of 3,000 islands, capitalTokyo
  • Constitutional monarchy with prime minister
  • History traces back to 660 BC

Emperor Akihito
3
Cultural Influences
  • China (system of writing music)
  • India, Korea, China (religion Buddhism)
  • Europe and U.S. (Western classical music popular
    culture)
  • During Meiji period (1868-1911, Western art music
    incorporated into educational system)

4
Japanese Isolationism
  • Edo/Tokugawa period (1600-1867) period of
    extreme isolationism, lead to consolidation of
    traditional arts
  • Japanese religions
  • Shinto (animist, was state religion until WWII)
  • Zen Buddhism (Japanese form of Buddhism,
    emphasizing meditation to reach state of
    heightened awareness)

5
Zen Art Forms
6
Japanese Ethos
  • Complex simplicity
  • Emphasis on process
  • Silence is just as important as sound
  • Arts important tool for spiritual development

7
Hogaku (Japanese Traditional Music)
  • PITCH AND SCALES
  • Octave divided into 12 intervals (NOT tempered)
    and not the same depending upon instrument
  • Pentatonic scales common
  • Scalescollection of intervals around nuclear
    tones located a fourth apart (emphasis on
    fourths)

8
Timbre and Melody
  • Use of variety of timbres, including unpitched
    sounds
  • Sparse textures
  • Singing tonal qualitytense, narrow
  • Emphasis on melody, not harmony
  • Use of short motifs
  • Open-ended pieces
  • Varied repetitions

9
Rhythm and Form
  • Use of flexible or beatless rhythm
  • Percussion rhythm may be different from melody
    rhythm (sliding door effect)
  • Most common form jo-ha-kyu (based on tempo
    changes)
  • Jo slow introduction
  • Habreaking apart (tempo builds)
  • Kyurushing, tempo reaches peak, then slows to end

10
Concept of Ma
  • maspace/interval, but refers to overall timing
    of piece, and relationship between sounds and
    silence
  • Aesthetic criteria a good performance has good
    ma

11
Instruments
Hichiriki
Shakuhachi
Koto
Shamisen
12
The Shakuhachi
  • End-blown bamboo flute (4 holes in front, 1 in
    back)
  • Wide range of timbres from pure to wide
  • Flourished during Tokugawa period
  • Associated with samurai/priest class, used as
    spiritual tool
  • Music tends to be unmetered, phrases follow
    breaths

13
Tsuru no sugomori (Cranes are Nesting)
(excerpt) (CD 4/1)
14
The Koto
  • Zither with hollow sound board, 13 strings, and
    movable bridges.
  • Originally used by elite as spiritual tool,
    later played by low/merchant class
  • Famous piece for koto Rokudan (Six Sections).
    Each dan has 104 beats, repeated with variations.

15
The Shamisen
  • 3-string long-necked lute, wooden body with skin
    back and face.
  • Includes buzzing string.
  • Associated with dramatic music, used in bunraku,
    kabuki, and kouta.
  • Associated with geishas performing in tea houses.

16
Kouta and Iemoto
  • Koutasong genre, response to women not being
    allowed to perform in kabuki.
  • Iemotoguild that guides and guards transmission
    of tradition and upholds teaching and performing
    standards.
  • Many guilds, or schools, each with rigid
    hierarchy. New composition often discouraged or
    forbidden.

17
Kouta Hakusen no (White Fan)
18
Bunraku (puppet theater)
  • Patronized by artisan and merchant classes
    (Tokugawa period)
  • Requires two musicians singer/narrator (tayu)
    and shamisen player (in past, served as
    apprentices for many years)
  • Uses large, elaborate puppets, some requiring
    several puppeteers
  • Plots highly emotional, like todays soap operas
  • Requires intense training and discipline

19
Popular Music Enka and Karaoke
  • Enka early modern song genre, arose in 1880s as
    political song of Peoples Rights Movement,
    later (by 1918) topics were often comical or
    sentimental.
  • Style notable Western influence combined with
    Japanese style characteristics.
  • Enka popular for karaoke sessions.

20
Karaoke
  • (Ka-ra-oh-kay) Empty orchestra
  • Technology designed to support and enhance
    amateur voices.
  • Used to reinforce traditional Japanese custom of
    group singing, considered vital for good group
    dynamics.
  • Scoring based on accuracy of reproduction, but
    also personal expressiveness
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