Gagaku
Gagaku (雅楽, n’asekyerɛ ara nye. "ndwom a ɔyɛ fɛw")[1] yɛ Japanfo tsetse ndwom bi a wɔdze dzii dwuma wɔ abakɔsɛm mu ma ahemfie ndwom na asaw ahorow. Wɔyɛɛ Gagaku dɛ Kyoto Ahemfie no ahemfie ndwom, na wɔdze ne su a ɔkame ayɛ dɛ ɔwɔ hɔ mprempren no sii hɔ wɔ Heian aber do (794–1185) bɛyɛ afeha a ɔtɔ do du (10).[2][3] Ndɛ, Amandzebɔ Bagua no na ɔyɛ wɔ Tokyo Ahemfie.
Abakɔsɛm
sesa muWɔdze Buddhasom a ofi China na ɔdze gagaku nhwɛsodze no baa Japan. Afe 589 mu no, wɔsomaa Japan aban ananmusifo ma wɔkɔr China (wɔ Sui ahemman no mu) dɛ worukosua Chinafo amambra, a Chinafo ahemfie ndwom ka ho. Edur afeha a ɔtɔ do esuon (7) no, na koto (zither a ɔwɔ nhama duebaasa (13)) na biwa (sanku a ne kɔn yɛ tseaa) fi China aba Japan. Ndwom ahorow, a ebien yi ka ho, na wodzii kan bɔɔ gagaku.[4]
Edwindadze ahorow
sesa muMframa, nhoma na edwindadze a wɔzde bɔ ndwom yɛ ndzɛmba a no ho hia wɔ gagaku ndwom mu. Na woeyi edwindadze bi, tse dɛ Haishō, Gogen biwa, Kugo afi ndwontofo kuw no mu wɔ Heian aber do na wɔasan ayɛ no a ogyina nkrataa dadaw no do na edwindadze a ɔwɔ Shōsō-in wɔ Showa ber mu no nkae bi do.
Edwindadze a ohia mframa
sesa mu- Hichiriki (篳篥), oboe
- O-hichiriki (大篳篥)
- Ryūteki (龍笛), transverse flute used in tōgaku
- Shō (笙), mouth organ
- U (竽), large mouth organ
- Komabue (高麗笛), transverse flute smaller than ryūteki, used in komagaku
- Azuma-asobi-bue (東遊笛), also called chukan
- Kagurabue (神楽笛), transverse flute larger than ryūteki, used in kuniburi no utamai
- (Ancient) Shakuhachi (尺八)
- Haishō (排簫), panpipes
Edwindadze a ohia nhoma
sesa mu- Gaku Biwa (楽琵琶), 4-stringed lute
- Gogen biwa (五絃琵琶), 5-stringed lute
- Gakusō (楽箏), 13-string zither of Chinese origin
- Kugo (箜篌), angled harp used in ancient times and recently revived
- Genkan (阮咸)
- Yamatogoto (大和琴, also called wa-gon), zither of Japanese origin, with 6 or 7 strings
Sanku
sesa mu- Shōko (鉦鼓), small gong, struck with two horn beaters
- Kakko (鞨鼓/羯鼓), small hourglass-shaped drum struck with two wooden sticks
- Tsuri-daiko (釣太鼓), drum on a stand with ornately painted head, played with two padded sticks
- Da-daiko (鼉太鼓), large drums used at festivals
- Ikko (一鼓), small, ornately decorated hourglass-shaped drum
- San-no-tsuzumi (三の鼓), hourglass-shaped drum
- Shakubyoshi (笏拍子, also called shaku), clapper made from a pair of flat wooden sticks
- Hōkyō (方響)
- Suzu (鈴), a bell tree clapper, specific to Mikomai dance performed as Mi-kagura
- Tsuzumi (鼓), hourglass drum, specific to Shirabyōshi dance performed as Mi-kagura
Hwɛ iyi nso
sesa muMboaedze
sesa mu- ↑ Kenkyusha's New Japanese-English Dictionary, Kenkyusha Limited, Tokyo 1991, ISBN 4-7674-2015-6
- ↑ History of gagaku Nihon gagakukai
- ↑ "雅楽 GAGAKU|文化デジタルライブラリー". web.archive.org. 2016-08-26. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
- ↑ Benito Ortolani (1995). The Japanese Theatre: From Shamanistic Ritual to Contemporary Pluralism. Princeton University Press. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-0691043333.