HISTORY OF JAPANESE MUSIC
Traditional / folk music of Japan Each country may has different types of folks musics. From town to town, village by village this can be changed. Different music instrument or different style of folk music maybe used. Traditional Japanese music is also composed of folk songs. These songs are mainly related to spiritual rituals and daily work. Although information about Japanese music from prehistoric times is limited, later on, Japanese folk music has become popular and has a more important role. Today, many people around the world like these styles!
- 18 Jul 19
The history of music in Japan is rich and varied, from its traditional folk music to JPop's global takeover.
Here's our overview of the different forms and instruments used in traditional Japanese music, many of which are showcased in our Sounds Of Japan collection.
CLASSICAL JAPANESE MUSIC
Historically, Japanese folk music was strongly influenced by music from China, with some of its forms being imported from China more than a thousand years ago. Many popular Japanese musical instruments originated in China and were then adapted to meet local needs.
TRADITIONAL JAPANESE MUSIC
Traditional Japanese music usually refers to Japan's historical folk music. Two forms are recognised as the oldest forms - shōmyō, or Buddhist chanting, and gagaku, or theatrical court music.
Shōmyō is a ritual music sung in a Buddhist ceremony by a group of Buddhist monks – literally translated, the word ‘shōmyō' combines the characters for ‘voice' and ‘wisdom'.
Gagaku is the oldest of Japan's musical traditions and includes dances and songs in two styles – kigaku, which is instrumental music, and seigaku, a form of vocal music.
There are several Japanese dramatic forms in which music plays a significant role. The main ones are kabuki and noh. Kabuki is known for its highly stylised dancing and singing, together with its elaborate make-up (sported by a predominantly male cast).
Noh is a form of classical Japanese musical drama which has been performed since the 14th century. Noh is often based on tales from traditional literature, with a supernatural being transformed into human form as a hero narrating the story – usually involving a mask being worn.
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Noh has been dubbed ‘Japanese opera' and is a ‘chanted drama', but the singing is dependent on a limited tonal range. The music has many blank spaces (ma) between the sounds; the negative blank spaces are in fact considered to be the heart of the music.
The accompaniment is provided by a hayashi ensemble of three drummers and a flautist.
INSTRUMENTAL JAPANESE MUSIC
Traditional Japanese music is meditative in character, with highly ritualised performance – sharing much in common with martial arts, and other Japanese art forms such as the tea ceremony and calligraphy. The music often looks to represent natural sounds, and the sounds of life, through percussion, wind and stringed instruments.
An interesting feature of classical Japanese music is its sparse rhythm and absence of regular chords. For mac korg gadget download. All of the rhythms are ‘ma'-based and silence is an important part of the songs.
JAPANESE MUSIC INSTRUMENTS
The key instruments used to play Japanese music are:
- Shamisen
- Shakuhachi
- Koto
The shamisen resembles a guitar, with a long, thin neck and a small rectangular body covered with skin. It has three strings, with the pitch adjusted by tuning pegs on the head, like a guitar or violin. It's played with a large triangular plectrum that's used to strike the strings.
(Image via)
The shakuhachi is a flute made of bamboo that's played by blowing on one end.
Sometimes called a ‘five-holed bamboo flute' in English, it has four holes on the front, and one on the back, and is characterised by its distinctively poignant tone.
(Image via)
Historians think the koto was invented around the fifth to the third century BC in China, with the 13-stringed version coming to Japan during the Nara period (710-794).
This large, wooden instrument is played with picks worn on the fingers, and uses movable bridges placed under each string to change the pitch.
Of these traditional instruments, the koto is probably the most familiar and popular. During the New Year holidays ‘Haru no Umi,' a duet with the shakuhachi, is often piped in as background music, and during the cherry blossom (sakura) season, the popular tune ‘Sakura, Sakura' is performed on the koto.
Explore these different aspects of Japanese music culture with our shamisen, shakuhachi and koto tracks.
TRADITIONAL JAPANESE ARTISTS
Many of the popular musicians playing the traditional music of Japan release albums and tour globally, bringing their music to a Western audience. For a great introduction, have a listen to:
Japanese Folk Music
The Yoshida Brothers
Their debut album sold over 100,000 copies and since then they've toured the US and recorded an album in Los Angeles, attracting international fans. Their music was also used in the TV commercial for Nintendo's Wii. Their style pushes the shamisen's sound from traditional music into jazz, experimental music, rock ‘n' roll and pop.
The Nenes
The Nenes (‘sisters' in Okinawan) are four women who sing Okinawan folk songs, performing on traditional instruments and in traditional costumes and reflecting the history of Japanese music. Ryuichi Sakamoto recorded with them and took them on a European tour in the mid-1990s, which gave their music global recognition.
Kodō
Kodō are one of the elite taiko drumming groups and have been a major force in the post-World War II revitalisation of taiko drumming, regularly touring in Japan and the United States. Their shows also include other traditional Japanese instruments, such as the shamisen, together with traditional dance and vocal performances.
We have a wide variety of Japanese music in our catalogue – from the traditional to the contemporary sounds of J-pop. One of our featured composers and artists is Joji Hirota. Born in Hokkaido, Joji is a multi-percussionist, shakuhachi player, singer and Taiko drummer. He founded Joji Hirota and the Taiko Drummers and was awarded the Ambassador's commendation award by the UK Japanese Embassy for his contribution to musical activity outside of Japan in recognition for his achievements in a three-decade long career.
WHERE TO DOWNLOAD JAPANESE MUSIC
Looking for Japanese music? Audio Network's Sounds Of Japan series showcases high quality, authentic music from shamisen-based rock to JPop, and delicate yet powerful Japanese instrumental performances.
Top Restaurants
When you hear the words, 'Japanese music,' what comes to mind? Sukiyaki? Babymetal? Hatsune Miku? Kodo? Perfume? Anime and video game soundtracks?
We are surrounded by a vast array of music in the modern world; in shops and cafes, on TV and in films, not to mention personal stereos, computer games and others. Among these, however, Japanese traditional music is almost non-existent. Here we will navigate you through the history of Japanese music, with a focus on traditional genres, and introduce you to some conventional music.
Most traditional Japanese music, with a handful of exceptions, developed from a base of narrative and lyrical vocalizations that related stories or poems, and were accompanied by instruments.
Political and cultural exchanges with China and the Korean Peninsula intensified from the 6th to 8th centuries. Along with Buddhism, a variety of music was brought to Japan (including Buddhist music and musical instruments), from as far as Thailand, Vietnam and the Bohai State, as well as Korea and China. Among them, Chinese court music, which was mostly presented with dancing, made a significant impact on music in Japan. Until that time, folk songs had been sung with dancing and musical accompaniment during Shinto rituals, ceremonies and functions at the regional level, as well as for the purpose of passing down history and important information from one generation to the next. As the governing power became centralized, local music was brought to the capital and adopted into court music.
Before long, a governmental music bureau was established with two departments: one dedicated to native music and the other to foreign music. It supervised court music and dance (the gagaku ensemble), and professional musicians who performed music and dance in the imperial court. The profession was hereditary, and its repertoire and traditions have been passed down from father to son for centuries. There are some families who carry on this tradition even today.
The general public was not exposed to foreign music. It was played mainly for the imperial families and court nobles by a small number of experts during observances held at the imperial court and temples. According to records, the diversity of foreign music in Japan reached a high point in 752, at the massive bronze Buddha statue's eye-opening ceremony at Todaiji Temple in Nara. A great variety of music was presented along with monks chanting sutra. The Shosoin Repository at Todaiji Temple still houses over 70 examples of 18 kinds of musical instruments from that time, some of which are no longer in existence today.
From the 9th to the 12th centuries, music gradually began to take root in the private lives of nobles: music and dance were performed during private parties by nobles themselves, and it became an important art form that the upper-classes were expected to learn. Around this time, the koto, or so (long zither) began to be used independently, apart from the ensembles performed during rituals in the imperial court and temples, and religious vocal music (the chanting of Buddhist sutras) went into full swing. The Shomyo Buddhist chant originally brought to Japan in Sanskrit and Chinese began to be transposed to fit with the intonation of the Japanese language. That composition method became significant in the music scene, and was used when heikyoku (the music played on the heike biwa as accompaniment to the recitation of The Tale of Heike), and joruri (a chanted recitative) developed into a music genre called katarimono (narrative music).
Shomyo http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/wasan/index.html
After the Tang Dynasty fell and the imperial envoys to Tang were abolished at the beginning of the 10th century, contact with foreign culture diminished. This lead to a variety of music being reorganized and gagaku to be nurtured in an indigenous way. Thus, distinctively Japanese versions of gagaku began to be composed, and popular songs emerged from this form of music, too.
Gagaku is a small orchestra consisting of strings and wind instruments accompanied by dance. Gagaku has waxed and waned through the millennium keeping nearly with the same style, including costumes, instruments and contents. Today, gagaku is transmitted by many groups, including the Imperial Palace Music Department, and performed during court observances, banquets and concerts.
Gagaku (Saibara) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/saibara/index.html
Popular song (Imayo) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/imayo/index.html
In the 13th century, samurai replaced court nobles as the managing government, and biwahoshi, musicians who narrated stories about war with biwa accompaniment, appeared. This music is called heikyoku. It is a type of narrative biwa music which relates the prosperity and decline of the Heike family, and was performed by monks who were blind, members of a guild called Todo. Later, the musicians of Todo actively incorporated the koto and shamisen (a three-stringed lute), bringing these instruments to the limelight for composition and performance.
The shakuhachi is a flute made of bamboo that's played by blowing on one end.
Sometimes called a ‘five-holed bamboo flute' in English, it has four holes on the front, and one on the back, and is characterised by its distinctively poignant tone.
(Image via)
Historians think the koto was invented around the fifth to the third century BC in China, with the 13-stringed version coming to Japan during the Nara period (710-794).
This large, wooden instrument is played with picks worn on the fingers, and uses movable bridges placed under each string to change the pitch.
Of these traditional instruments, the koto is probably the most familiar and popular. During the New Year holidays ‘Haru no Umi,' a duet with the shakuhachi, is often piped in as background music, and during the cherry blossom (sakura) season, the popular tune ‘Sakura, Sakura' is performed on the koto.
Explore these different aspects of Japanese music culture with our shamisen, shakuhachi and koto tracks.
TRADITIONAL JAPANESE ARTISTS
Many of the popular musicians playing the traditional music of Japan release albums and tour globally, bringing their music to a Western audience. For a great introduction, have a listen to:
Japanese Folk Music
The Yoshida Brothers
Their debut album sold over 100,000 copies and since then they've toured the US and recorded an album in Los Angeles, attracting international fans. Their music was also used in the TV commercial for Nintendo's Wii. Their style pushes the shamisen's sound from traditional music into jazz, experimental music, rock ‘n' roll and pop.
The Nenes
The Nenes (‘sisters' in Okinawan) are four women who sing Okinawan folk songs, performing on traditional instruments and in traditional costumes and reflecting the history of Japanese music. Ryuichi Sakamoto recorded with them and took them on a European tour in the mid-1990s, which gave their music global recognition.
Kodō
Kodō are one of the elite taiko drumming groups and have been a major force in the post-World War II revitalisation of taiko drumming, regularly touring in Japan and the United States. Their shows also include other traditional Japanese instruments, such as the shamisen, together with traditional dance and vocal performances.
We have a wide variety of Japanese music in our catalogue – from the traditional to the contemporary sounds of J-pop. One of our featured composers and artists is Joji Hirota. Born in Hokkaido, Joji is a multi-percussionist, shakuhachi player, singer and Taiko drummer. He founded Joji Hirota and the Taiko Drummers and was awarded the Ambassador's commendation award by the UK Japanese Embassy for his contribution to musical activity outside of Japan in recognition for his achievements in a three-decade long career.
WHERE TO DOWNLOAD JAPANESE MUSIC
Looking for Japanese music? Audio Network's Sounds Of Japan series showcases high quality, authentic music from shamisen-based rock to JPop, and delicate yet powerful Japanese instrumental performances.
Top Restaurants
When you hear the words, 'Japanese music,' what comes to mind? Sukiyaki? Babymetal? Hatsune Miku? Kodo? Perfume? Anime and video game soundtracks?
We are surrounded by a vast array of music in the modern world; in shops and cafes, on TV and in films, not to mention personal stereos, computer games and others. Among these, however, Japanese traditional music is almost non-existent. Here we will navigate you through the history of Japanese music, with a focus on traditional genres, and introduce you to some conventional music.
Most traditional Japanese music, with a handful of exceptions, developed from a base of narrative and lyrical vocalizations that related stories or poems, and were accompanied by instruments.
Political and cultural exchanges with China and the Korean Peninsula intensified from the 6th to 8th centuries. Along with Buddhism, a variety of music was brought to Japan (including Buddhist music and musical instruments), from as far as Thailand, Vietnam and the Bohai State, as well as Korea and China. Among them, Chinese court music, which was mostly presented with dancing, made a significant impact on music in Japan. Until that time, folk songs had been sung with dancing and musical accompaniment during Shinto rituals, ceremonies and functions at the regional level, as well as for the purpose of passing down history and important information from one generation to the next. As the governing power became centralized, local music was brought to the capital and adopted into court music.
Before long, a governmental music bureau was established with two departments: one dedicated to native music and the other to foreign music. It supervised court music and dance (the gagaku ensemble), and professional musicians who performed music and dance in the imperial court. The profession was hereditary, and its repertoire and traditions have been passed down from father to son for centuries. There are some families who carry on this tradition even today.
The general public was not exposed to foreign music. It was played mainly for the imperial families and court nobles by a small number of experts during observances held at the imperial court and temples. According to records, the diversity of foreign music in Japan reached a high point in 752, at the massive bronze Buddha statue's eye-opening ceremony at Todaiji Temple in Nara. A great variety of music was presented along with monks chanting sutra. The Shosoin Repository at Todaiji Temple still houses over 70 examples of 18 kinds of musical instruments from that time, some of which are no longer in existence today.
From the 9th to the 12th centuries, music gradually began to take root in the private lives of nobles: music and dance were performed during private parties by nobles themselves, and it became an important art form that the upper-classes were expected to learn. Around this time, the koto, or so (long zither) began to be used independently, apart from the ensembles performed during rituals in the imperial court and temples, and religious vocal music (the chanting of Buddhist sutras) went into full swing. The Shomyo Buddhist chant originally brought to Japan in Sanskrit and Chinese began to be transposed to fit with the intonation of the Japanese language. That composition method became significant in the music scene, and was used when heikyoku (the music played on the heike biwa as accompaniment to the recitation of The Tale of Heike), and joruri (a chanted recitative) developed into a music genre called katarimono (narrative music).
Shomyo http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/wasan/index.html
After the Tang Dynasty fell and the imperial envoys to Tang were abolished at the beginning of the 10th century, contact with foreign culture diminished. This lead to a variety of music being reorganized and gagaku to be nurtured in an indigenous way. Thus, distinctively Japanese versions of gagaku began to be composed, and popular songs emerged from this form of music, too.
Gagaku is a small orchestra consisting of strings and wind instruments accompanied by dance. Gagaku has waxed and waned through the millennium keeping nearly with the same style, including costumes, instruments and contents. Today, gagaku is transmitted by many groups, including the Imperial Palace Music Department, and performed during court observances, banquets and concerts.
Gagaku (Saibara) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/saibara/index.html
Popular song (Imayo) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/imayo/index.html
In the 13th century, samurai replaced court nobles as the managing government, and biwahoshi, musicians who narrated stories about war with biwa accompaniment, appeared. This music is called heikyoku. It is a type of narrative biwa music which relates the prosperity and decline of the Heike family, and was performed by monks who were blind, members of a guild called Todo. Later, the musicians of Todo actively incorporated the koto and shamisen (a three-stringed lute), bringing these instruments to the limelight for composition and performance.
Heikyoku http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/heikebiwa/index.html
Sarugaku, mimicry with musical accompaniment, was brought to a level of perfection and sophisticated Noh made its appearance, thanks to the patronage of the shogun. In the process of refinement, songs and dance were added to the art of mimicking and performances were minimized and stylized, while the staging space was simplified. Noh is performed with song and the musical accompaniment of a flute (nohkan), a small hand drum (kotsuzumi), a large hand drum (okawa) and a drum (taiko). The music is called yokyoku.
Noh (Aoi no Ue) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc14/aoinoue/kansyou/point/sono3.html
Yokyoku (Makiginu) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/youkyoku/index.html
During this period of time, the three-stringed sanshin emerged from Ryukyu (currently Okinawa), and later transformed into the shamisen, made with the skin of dogs or cats instead of snakes. It was the biwa players who saw potential in this musical instrument, and use of the shamisen soon spread nationwide. Later, in the Edo Period (17th–19th centuries), it became an essential instrument for song accompaniment (jiuta).
Jiuta (Sode no Tsuyu) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/jiuta/index.html
In the middle of the 16th century, guns and Christianity were brought to Japan, and church music was introduced by the missionaries of the Society of Jesus. This was the first European-style music that Japanese people had ever heard. By the late 16th century, the chorus of Gregorian chants and performances of Western musical instruments could be heard in Oita, which was the center of the Society of Jesus missionary. Music was even taught at seminaries for children of the high-ranking samurai. Church music performances were, however, limited to churches for Japanese Christians, and before this style of music took root in the public, Christianity and everything related to it were completely banned (in some places, however, people kept their faith and have covertly passed down church songs for generations).
Even as wars and confusion in society continued, the social and economic status of the common people rose, inspiring the development of folk performing arts such as Odori Nenbutsu (a dance performed while reciting the name: Amida Buddha). Cultural exchanges beyond social class became active, and the musical genre of kouta became popular among the common people.
Kouta (Nanatsugo) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/chusei/index.html
After the establishment of the Tokugawa Shogunate, an extended period of peace empowered the common people. Distinctively Japanese culture blossomed, because the Shogunate's policy was to close the doors on the rest of the world. Music was composed and performed in big cities such as Edo (modern-day Tokyo) and Osaka, and the general public proved to be a responsive audience.
One of the most popular kinds of music involved the shamisen. This instrument, brought to Japan in the 16th century, quickly and widely spread among the common people, and played a major role in the popular music of the time.
During the Edo Period (17th-19th centuries), the music that people enjoyed was different depending on their social class: Gagaku was for court nobles and Noh was for the samurai class. The Shogunate had a bureau that supervised Todo and promoted performances by artists who were seeing-impaired, and who also made up the great majority of jiuta and koto musicians. Shakuhachi (an end-blown bamboo flute) was designated a religious musical instrument by the Shogunate and only priests of the Fukeshu Sect of Buddhism were allowed to play it.
Shakuhachi music (Shika no Tone) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQdzKhJHqe4
After the 17th century, narration with shamisen accompaniment and puppet plays became integrated, fascinating people with ningyo joruri (puppet theater). Out of several joruri schools, one specifically had a strong influence on Kabuki dance music.
Ningyo Joruri (Bunraku) Heike Nyogo no Shima http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/gidayu/index.html
Kabuki, too, appeared and became popular during this period of time. Kabuki Theatre was originally a dance performance with singing, but transformed into a theatrical art in the late 17th century. A florid and lilting style of music found in Kabuki plays called nagauta (songs with shamisen accompaniment), developed, too.
Kabuki (Musume Dojoji)
http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc11/sakuhin/enmoku/p7/b.html
Nagauta (Kyokanoko Musume Dojoji)
http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/nagauta/index.html
Also around the 17th century, use of the koto expanded. While the accompaniment of songs was performed mainly by shamisen until around that time, koto began to be played along with the jiuta songs as well. A genius koto player named Yatsuhashi Kengyo improved the instrument so that it could produce louder sounds in order to be played solo, and began changing the positions of bridges to play different scales. Thus, he built the foundation for today's koto music.
Koto music (Kumoi no Kyoku) http://www2.ntj.jac.go.jp/dglib/contents/learn/edc8/deao/ikuta/index.html
When the U. S. Commodore Perry visited Japan to negotiate the opening of the country, a military band accompanied him on his expedition, and it offered a window to Western music for Japanese people. In efforts to counter the great powers, Western-style military groups were organized in feudal domains around Japan and military music using drums and bugles was introduced, too. So, by the time of the opening of the country, there was already a foundation of Western-style music. Music began to be composed and performed using European methodology among the military bands and musicians from the Imperial Palace Music Department.
Also around this time in the late 19th century, the national anthem 'Kimigayo' was created. Music education was started in elementary and middle schools to teach shoka (how to sing songs with instrumental accompaniment) and organs were brought in. Music teachers were invited from the US, and many songbooks were published. Among others, songs such as Hotaru no Hikari (light of fireflies) were created using the melody of foreign folk songs like 'Auld Lang Sine.' This melody is popular even today and is often heard when shops are closing for the night, at the end of sporting events such as the High School Baseball Summer Championships, and on the end-of-the-year 'song battle' TV program, Kohaku Utagassen.
The reason for this song's popularity is because the tune is similar to the traditional pentatonic scale most familiar to the Japanese ear. This scale consisting of five tones continued to have an influence on Japanese composers even after the late 19th century. At first, the Western-style music composed by the Japanese people was slow in tempo like gagaku, but after the First Sino-Japanese War, skip-like lilts became prevalent.
Hotaru no Hikari https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brUWAlQsWMg
Many songs were written and composed to fit with the intonation of the Japanese spoken language, for example, Usagi to Kame (rabbits and turtles), Hatopoppo (doves) and Oshogatsu (New Year's Day). Around 1900, people eagerly took in Western music and a great number of songs and instrumental pieces were composed at that time. Many songs were sung at schools and preschools, and education became the incubator of Western-style Japanese music.
Hatopoppo composed by Rentaro Taki https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlZdpLe6YtQ
Military bands, as well as music groups organized by former members of military bands, also provided opportunities for people to become more familiar with Western-style music through regular concerts and music tours. Some people were inspired by these concerts to become professional musicians.
The Taisho Period (1912–1925) saw the emergence of popular songs because people began to have record players. Radios also played a significant role in spreading a variety of music among the common people. As people gathered in large cities for more job opportunities from local regions, local folk songs also flew into cities, and that led to the folk song boom. Opera and orchestral music were performed and enjoyed as well.
Kachusha no Uta (Katyusha's song) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TiMpE83f8GM
In the traditional music scene, Michio Miyagi, a koto player and composer, made a great contribution. He adapted Western music methodology to compose and perform music for the koto and other traditional Japanese instruments, and invented the 17-string koto (koto traditionally has thirteen strings) in order to play lower sounds. He began performing Western music using Japanese instruments, and thus forged a new form of koto art that suited contemporary tastes, while maintaining traditions.
17-string Koto* performance (Seoto) *Koto on the right https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LF3bM0X_xDY
After World War II, a movement to revive Japanese classical music began and traditional Japanese music was reappraised. Brand-new Noh plays were created, and conventional musicians expanded the potential of traditional instruments by actively applying Western music methods. Toru Takemitsu's orchestra piece, 'November Steps,' featured biwa and shakuhachi solos, drawing attention abroad to these instruments after its sensational world debut in New York in 1967
A hundred years after the first encounter with Western music, Japanese composers, including Akira Ifukube, Toshiro Mayuzumi and Maki Ishii, as well as Toru Takemitsu, became known worldwide. Isao Tomita became the pioneer of synthesizer music and inspired the world, too.
What is happening to traditional music and people who play it? Traditional music is now almost ignored by the majority of Japanese people. The number of people who are familiar with the piano and the guitar is probably way more than those who are with koto and shamisen. Music education at schools is centered on European classical music after the mid-18th century rather than Japanese music, and musical instruments commonly seen at schools are recorders, keyboard harmonicas, pianos and organs. It is only recently, in 2002, that it became mandatory for middle schoolers to learn to play at least one Japanese traditional instrument such as the koto, the bamboo flute or the shamisen in music class. In reality, however, students often end up just briefly listening to a few traditional music pieces due to the lack of teachers who know how to play and/or teach traditional musical instruments, and funds to provide students with enough instruments.
Younger generations of traditional instrument players are pushing themselves hard to reach a wider audience by playing popular tunes, or pieces composed or arranged in Western music styles. They are going solo, putting together ensembles of traditional instruments, or playing with Western instruments such as the electric guitar, drums and the piano, in order to make themselves more accessible to modern tastes while still honoring their heritage. However, whether these efforts will be fruitful without being short-lived booms and whether traditional music will rank with Western-style music in Japan in the future is still in doubt. That said, Japanese people tend to be more familiar with Western music than traditional Japanese music, so conventional instruments used to play Western-style music could be a hook for creating interest in traditional music. Fusion with the West and future innovations could be standard, or even traditional, 400 years from now!
Bad Apple!! Performed by an ensemble https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dx76YPgZviE
Oriental Journey by AUN J Orchestra https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rzDnHiT_-ao
Senbonzakura by Wagakki Band https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_xTet06SUo&list=RDbKQp5zHMwC8&index=6
Japanese Folk Music
Stairway to Heaven (Led Zeppelin) performed by two sets of Koto and Shakuhachi https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZPnt4tKGdU
Beat It (Michael Jackson) performed by Otsuzumi, Nohkan, Kotsuzumi, Taiko, bass and guitar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFQ4DJuwJwA
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Japanese Folk Music Facts
More links to whet your appetite for learning about Japan and all things Japanese
Japanese Folk Music Lyrics
- ・Traditional Musical Instruments of Japan
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