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Shakuhachi:The Zen Flute (The Distant Call of the Deer) single, 2018; Music for Yoga and Reiki:Relaxation music for shakuhachi 2019; Poem of Japan:Music for Shakuhachi Single, 2019; For Luna (Variations of Neptune) Film Music for Shakuhachi flute Single, 2020; Healing Buddha Music (New Age & Chill Out) Shakuhachi Flute Music , 2020
Download QR code; Print/export ... is a transverse bamboo flute, a fue that is used in traditional Japanese court music ... It is a transverse flute with six finger ...
Shakuhachi – vertical bamboo flute used for Zen meditation; Shinobue – transverse folk bamboo flute; Tsuchibue (土笛 (つちぶえ), lit. ' earthen flute ') – globular flute made from clay; Bow flute (弓笛) – a flute developed by Ishida Nehito with bow hair on it to accompany the kokyū [1]
Ron Korb's Asian Flute Gallery (features description and drawing of the Shinobue and other Japanese flutes); Syoji Yamaguchi's web site on Japanese transverse flutes Archived 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine (features articles on making and playing of the Shinobue and other Japanese transverse flutes: yokobue or fue)
Masakazu Yoshizawa (吉沢 政和, September 10, 1950 – October 24, 2007) was a Japanese American flutist and musician, known for his mastery of the bamboo flute, specifically the shakuhachi. Yoshizawa also mastered several other traditional Japanese flutes, in addition to other Japanese and Western musical instruments. [1]
Used in Japanese music seeming to have a Chinese origin. Its sound is said to represent the ascension of dragons. Nohkan: Transverse A flute used in the Noh theatre and hayashi ensembles. Shinobue: Transverse Also called the bamboo flute, it is used for nagauta, the background music used in kabuki theatre. Kagurabue: Transverse This fue is used ...
Download as PDF; Printable version ... Koto & Flute (1960) ... "fans of traditional Japanese music and those familiar with Shank's jazz recordings will enjoy this ...
Various kinds of Yokobue. A yokobue (横笛) is a Japanese transverse flute or fue.The various types include the komabue, nōkan, ryūteki, and shinobue. [1]These flutes have an extra closed chamber (for improved timbre and tonal qualities) that extends past the chin to the left shoulder and can be used as a rest in the same way as violins are rested on the left shoulder.