Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Straight to your soul': Japan's taiko reinvents drum tradition

EUR -
AED 4.24119
AFN 73.895229
ALL 96.121797
AMD 435.474912
ANG 2.066857
AOA 1058.781575
ARS 1596.310642
AUD 1.675918
AWG 2.07975
AZN 1.960111
BAM 1.969704
BBD 2.324417
BDT 141.599507
BGN 1.973594
BHD 0.43586
BIF 3422.279069
BMD 1.154615
BND 1.489917
BOB 7.974288
BRL 6.006067
BSD 1.154051
BTN 109.817165
BWP 15.920377
BYN 3.431925
BYR 22630.455382
BZD 2.320983
CAD 1.608887
CDF 2638.295737
CHF 0.924067
CLF 0.027103
CLP 1070.177986
CNY 7.960731
CNH 7.957821
COP 4258.786141
CRC 536.589946
CUC 1.154615
CUP 30.597299
CVE 110.698737
CZK 24.551703
DJF 205.198458
DKK 7.471171
DOP 69.389397
DZD 153.622695
EGP 62.963126
ERN 17.319226
ETB 181.332532
FJD 2.586049
FKP 0.875243
GBP 0.871983
GEL 3.106408
GGP 0.875243
GHS 12.700953
GIP 0.875243
GMD 85.441642
GNF 10131.746943
GTQ 8.830369
GYD 241.515831
HKD 9.053296
HNL 30.718522
HRK 7.533981
HTG 151.469174
HUF 384.711992
IDR 19561.603986
ILS 3.6446
IMP 0.875243
INR 108.105439
IQD 1512.545742
IRR 1519329.105994
ISK 143.368111
JEP 0.875243
JMD 182.578767
JOD 0.818602
JPY 183.457368
KES 150.099783
KGS 100.971005
KHR 4630.006503
KMF 494.755683
KPW 1039.124319
KRW 1743.41035
KWD 0.357388
KYD 0.961688
KZT 549.841159
LAK 25343.800878
LBP 103395.779747
LKR 364.071444
LRD 212.073918
LSL 19.709295
LTL 3.409278
LVL 0.698416
LYD 7.395285
MAD 10.786992
MDL 20.438267
MGA 4823.981745
MKD 61.622462
MMK 2424.112128
MNT 4123.140655
MOP 9.318717
MRU 46.311692
MUR 54.405395
MVR 17.862002
MWK 2005.566775
MXN 20.731979
MYR 4.67505
MZN 73.837509
NAD 19.709099
NGN 1599.396069
NIO 42.409414
NOK 11.215521
NPR 175.707263
NZD 2.012736
OMR 0.443931
PAB 1.154046
PEN 4.036553
PGK 5.069058
PHP 69.790126
PKR 322.368849
PLN 4.29201
PYG 7475.769141
QAR 4.207446
RON 5.10028
RSD 117.465776
RUB 93.877539
RWF 1685.738003
SAR 4.333345
SBD 9.285457
SCR 16.140178
SDG 693.923359
SEK 10.948418
SGD 1.485995
SHP 0.86626
SLE 28.345495
SLL 24211.71322
SOS 659.875403
SRD 43.152621
STD 23898.200801
STN 25.084012
SVC 10.098325
SYP 127.648533
SZL 19.70917
THB 37.692393
TJS 11.06158
TMT 4.052699
TND 3.38287
TOP 2.780035
TRY 51.317212
TTD 7.840377
TWD 36.893992
TZS 2988.502822
UAH 50.701002
UGX 4344.686613
USD 1.154615
UYU 46.820491
UZS 14081.108519
VES 546.453738
VND 30412.560957
VUV 138.950239
WST 3.197445
XAF 660.620113
XAG 0.015389
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.120405
XCG 2.079881
XDR 0.820876
XOF 658.695399
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.548508
ZAR 19.591197
ZMK 10392.918889
ZMW 22.059713
ZWL 371.785582
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.1528

    22.15

    -0.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0520

    22.448

    -0.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.7600

    15.05

    +5.05%

  • GSK

    0.5800

    54.81

    +1.06%

  • NGG

    0.9000

    84.59

    +1.06%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    195.24

    +0.7%

  • BTI

    0.1900

    58.45

    +0.33%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.12

    -0.44%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.11

    +1.09%

  • RIO

    4.0800

    92.9

    +4.39%

  • BCC

    0.9000

    75.85

    +1.19%

  • VOD

    0.3000

    15

    +2%

  • JRI

    0.3800

    12.3

    +3.09%

  • BP

    -0.4550

    46.895

    -0.97%

'Straight to your soul': Japan's taiko reinvents drum tradition
'Straight to your soul': Japan's taiko reinvents drum tradition / Photo: Charly TRIBALLEAU - AFP

'Straight to your soul': Japan's taiko reinvents drum tradition

In a hall on Japan's Sado island, 71-year-old Yoshikazu Fujimoto strikes the imposing drum mounted before him, producing a boom so powerful that it reverberates through the floorboards.

Text size:

Fujimoto is a veteran performer of Japanese taiko drumming, a musical form with roots in religious rituals, traditional theatre and the joyous abandon of seasonal festivals called matsuri.

But for all its ancient pedigree, taiko as a stage performance is a fairly modern invention, developed by a jazz musician and popularised in part by one of Japan's most famous troupes: Sado island's Kodo.

Fujimoto is the oldest of the 37 musicians that make up the group, which recruits members through a rigorous two-year training programme.

It was founded partly to attract people to Sado, off Japan's west coast, and tours internationally, spreading the gospel of taiko.

"Taiko itself is like a prayer," said Fujimoto, who came to Sado in 1972 to join the group that evolved into Kodo.

"It used to be said that the area reached by the sound of a drum made up a single community," he said.

"Through taiko... I want to become part of a community with the audience and send a message of living together, a message of compassion."

It has been a life-long project for Fujimoto, who is a specialist performer of the o-daiko, an enormous single drum mounted on a stand that is struck by a musician standing with his back to the audience and arms raised overhead.

The effect is an all-encompassing wall of sound that seems to enter the ribcage and vibrate through its bones.

And it is highly physical, with Fujimoto grunting in exertion as the muscles in his almost-bare back flex beneath the straps of his tunic with every strike.

- 'One with the sound' -

"I become one with the sound," he said. "Playing taiko makes me feel I'm alive."

Kodo's performances range from the sombre power of the o-daiko solo to ensemble pieces featuring flute and singing, and even comic interludes that encourage audience participation.

Taiko simply means drum in Japanese, and performers use two main types.

The first is made from a single, hollowed tree trunk with cow or horsehide nailed over each end. The second uses hide stretched over rings attached with ropes to a wooden body.

They have been part of rituals and theatrical artforms like noh and kabuki in Japan for centuries.

But drumming in those contexts is often a solemn practice,while modern taiko performance is closer to folk festivals where troupes often made up of local residents play in streets or fields to unite the community, drive away malign influences or pray for a good harvest.

"Contemporary taiko drumming took a lot of inspiration from this local festival drumming and combined with more formal traditional performing arts to evolve into what we see as taiko drumming today," explained Yoshihiko Miyamoto, whose company Miyamoto Unosuke has made taiko for over 160 years.

Key to that evolution was jazz drummer Daihachi Oguchi, who moved festival drumming onto the stage in the 1950s and 60s.

Then in 1969, musician Den Tagayasu moved to Sado to found a taiko troupe that he hoped would attract young people to the island and revitalise it.

- 'Straight to your soul' -

Fujimoto left his native Kyoto to join the group known as Ondekoza, and when they split he stayed and helped found Kodo.

Joining now involves an arduous two-year training programme, where apprentices aged 18-25 live in dorms, without phones or televisions.

"The day starts at 5am, when we get up and immediately go out to stretch. Then we start cleaning and polishing the floors," said Hana Ogawa, a 20-year-old who completed the trainee programme this year.

After cleaning, the trainees go for a run and then spend the entire day practising, with breaks only for food. They have one day off a week.

It might not be for everyone, but Ogawa, who decided to join Kodo after seeing them perform in high school, has no regrets.

"I'm happy every day, because I love taiko and I pursued this one goal and achieved it, so it's a dream come true," she told AFP.

Taiko drumming has been growing in popularity at home and abroad in recent years, with troupes established in Europe and the United States and a steady rise in overseas orders for Miyamoto's store.

"Taiko has the power to connect people with its sound," he said.

"Especially in this contemporary age, you hear the sound of machines everywhere, but taiko uses this raw hide and the drum bodies made by wood," he added.

"It's like a sound of nature, it's very organic. I think that's one of the reasons it comes straight to your soul."

(K.Müller--BBZ)