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尺八 SHAKUHACHI flute - Rodrigo Rodriguez - contemporary Japanese music
説明
Hi To Mi (ひとみ): solo shakuhachi

Composed by Horii Kojiro (堀井 小二朗) in 1954 for the film Twenty-Four Eyes (二十四の瞳 Nijū-shi no Hitomi), based on the 1952 novel of the same name by Sakae Tsuboi, is a 1954 Japanese film directed by Keisuke Kinoshita.

Shakuhachi performed by Rodrigo Rodriguez
http://www.rodrigo-rodriguez.info

Film & edition by Gabriel Flain
https://www.unevisual.com feel · film & flow

Recorded in the Church of San Miguel de Fofe, Galicia.
Spain@ 2014
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Shakuhachi: The Zen Flute : (The Distant Call of the Deer) 尺八 Shika no Tone 鹿の遠音
説明
On this unique occasion, the shakuhachi flute of the masters Kohachiro Miyata (1938) and Rodrigo Rodriguez (1978) perform a traditional work arranged in 1974 by Kohachiro Miyata. The Distant Call of the Deer and The Cranes Nesting are the most famous and notable shakuhachi pieces in the Mu-Ryu musical lineage.the piece's special effects call for a particular kind of audible breathing in which the melodic line is never lost. Often the work is heard as a duet for two shakuhachi, and it is not certain which version is the original. It is played here on the standard-sized instrument {this particular composition is rarely).
It is said that the piece was originally learned by Kurosawa Kinko (1710-71), founder of the Kinko school, of a Komuso priest named Ikkeishi.
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Kōhachirō Miyata & Rodrigo Rodríguez (The Distant Call of the Deer) 尺八 Shakuhachi
説明
Kohachiro Miyata © & Rodrigo Rodriguez
Shakuhachi: The Zen Flute : (The Distant Call of the Deer) 尺八 Shika no Tone 鹿の遠音

On this unique occasion, the shakuhachi flute of the masters Kohachiro Miyata (1938) and Rodrigo Rodriguez (1978) perform a traditional work arranged in 1974 by Kohachiro Miyata. The Distant Call of the Deer and The Cranes Nesting are the most famous and notable shakuhachi pieces in the Mu-Ryu musical lineage.the piece's special effects call for a particular kind of audible breathing in which the melodic line is never lost. Often the work is heard as a duet for two shakuhachi, and it is not certain which version is the original. It is played here on the standard-sized instrument {this particular composition is rarely).
It is said that the piece was originally learned by Kurosawa Kinko (1710-71), founder of the Kinko school, of a Komuso priest named Ikkeishi.

Video produced by: Daniel Torres Gallardo (El Cubo el Directo)
Audio mastering: Alejandro Maestre
Music recorded by Rodrigo Rodriguez 8th October 2018, Tokyo Japan.
Edited by B.M.Records

http://www.rodrigo-rodriguez.info
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Traveller's Song - (Fukuda Rando 1906-1976)福田 蘭童 Rodrigo Rodriguez 尺八
説明
Rodrigo Rodriguez performing Tabibito no Uta 旅人の唄 classics from Japan, Fukuda Rando (1906-1976)

Recorded in 2018 Spain, Iglesia de San Salvador de Maceira.
Audio: Alejandro Maestre (maestretecnico@gmail.com)
Video: El Cubo en Director, Daniel Torres Gallardo :http://elcuboendirecto.com

Instagram:@rodrigoshakuhachi

http://www.rodrigo-rodriguez.info
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Shakuhachi 尺八 Bamboo flute - Rodrigo Rodriguez “Falling Leaves”
説明
Sagari Ha (Nezasa Ha) 下り葉 (根笹)

The Japanese characters used to depict this title are "sagaru" . ("fallen" or "falling") and "ha" ("leaves"). The song is easily recognizable because of the sasabuki blowing technique used frequently by the Nezasa sect of shakuhachi. Sasa are the leaves of the small bamboo bushes or thickets. The technique aims to imitate the sound of the leaves rustling against one another as the wind blows through the thicket. Sagariha was played along with another song, Sagari no Kyoku, during the parade procession of the Gion Matsuri in Kyoto. "Sagaru" is also the word used during the Edo Period (1603-1867) to indicate movement away from the capital (Tokyo) and also used to indicate the direction away from a shrine. Since shrines were often built on hilltops, one would be going downhill (sagaru) when exiting the shrine. The words "sagaru" ("down" or "south") and "agaru" ("up" or "north") are peculiar to Kyoto vocabulary and suggests the origin of this song.

From the album: The Classical Music Legacy of Japan (2018)

Video Produced:http://www.mclartyfilms.com
Music and sound:http://www.rodrigo-rodriguez.info