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  2. Rokudan no shirabe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rokudan_no_shirabe

    It was originally a sōkyoku (Japanese: 箏曲, lit. 'koto music'), a kind of chamber music with the koto playing the leading part, but nowadays the part of the koto is more widely known than the original. The music is made from six columns, hence the name, and there are exactly fifty-two beats in each column, except for the first row, which ...

  3. Haru no Umi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haru_no_Umi

    Haru no Umi (春の海, "The Sea in Spring") is a Shin Nihon Ongaku ('New Japanese Music') piece for koto and shakuhachi composed in 1929 by Michio Miyagi.It is Miyagi's best known piece and one of the most famous for the koto and shakuhachi instruments.

  4. Tadao Sawai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tadao_Sawai

    Tadao Sawai (沢井 忠夫, Sawai Tadao, 1938 – April 1, 1997) was a Japanese koto player and composer. He was renowned all over Japan for his skill at the koto and also received acclaim for his compositions.

  5. Kimio Eto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimio_Eto

    Kimio Eto (衛藤公雄, Etō Kimio) (surname Etō, born 28 September 1924 in Ōita – died 24 December 2012 [1]) was a blind Japanese musician who played the koto.He began musical training at the age of eight with the renowned master Michio Miyagi.

  6. Danmono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danmono

    A woman playing a koto, depicted in 1878 by Settei Hasegawa.. Danmono (Japanese: 段物) is a traditional Japanese style of instrumental music for the koto.The few pieces of its repertoire were mostly composed and developed in the seventeenth century, and all follow a strict form of composition.

  7. Poison: Iitai Koto mo Ienai Konna Yo no Naka wa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poison:_Iitai_Koto_mo...

    "Poison: Iitai Koto mo Ienai Konna Yo no Naka wa" is a Japanese rock and pop song that lasts for 4 minutes and 5 seconds, [1] [2] composed in E major with an allegro tempo of 138 beats per minute, according to sheet music from Doremi Music Publishing. [3] It opens with an instrumental intro, featuring a continuously rising and falling guitar riff.

  8. Sakura Sakura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakura_Sakura

    The melody arranged by Ongaku Torishirabe-gakari was included in Collection of Japanese Koto Music issued in 1888, for beginning koto students in the Tokyo Academy of Music. [4] Often, It is the first piece that koto beginners learn because they can play any phrase by picking closer strings without skipping to distant strings. [2]

  9. Yatsuhashi Kengyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yatsuhashi_Kengyo

    Yatsuhashi Kengyō (八橋 検校; 1614–1685) was a Japanese musician and composer from Kyoto. The name kengyō is an honorary title given to highly skilled blind musicians. Yatsuhashi, who was born and died in Japan, was originally a player of the shamisen, but later learned the koto from a musician of the Japanese court. While the ...