Current
Issue (#69)
 


Home

About KJ

KJ News

Selections

Back Issues

Subscriptions

Contact KJ


10,000 Things



Theme Issues

Unbound Online

Korea Online

In Translation

Online Features

Interviews & Profiles

Encounters

KJ Reviews

Rambles

Blogology

KJ Readers' Resources

Recommended Links

Related Publications

Reviews of KJ

Distribution

Submissions

Helping KJ

 

 

 

Ten Thousand Things
Multicultural Webfinds

"Ten Thousand Things" is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in the universe.


AogashimaTrance, Taarab queen Bi Kidude, and "Imaginary Folk Music" at 23rd Tokyo Summer Festival

The Arion-Edo Foundation, dedicated to international music exchange and supporting young musicians, is my idea of the best kind of grassroots arts organization, with exuberant and affirmative energy.

This open creative flow and rasa can be felt in this year's Tokyo Summer Festival, "Towards the Islands: Sounds across the Sea," with music from islands around the world, including Japan's islands.

"Local Religious Rituals and Folk Performance from Aogashima Island," featuring trance spiritual practices dating from before the Meiji era, when the government forcibly separated the centuries-old syncretism between Buddhism and Shinto, will be held on July 15, the first time these rituals will ever be performed outside of Aogashima.

On July 19, at Shibuya C.C. Lemon Hall, East Africa's greatest living musical legend: 95-year-old Taarab queen Bi Kidude will perform live on stage, with 15 musicians of Zanzibar's most successful orchestra for the first time in Japan:

"Zanzibar is a coral reef island situated in the Indian Ocean, close to East African Tanzania, and has been a flourishing turning point for traders from Central Africa, the Middle East and India for centuries. One of the heritages of the island's mosaic of cultural influences is taarab music, the first mass mediated music of the region. During the 23rd Tokyo Summer Festival the group Culture Musical Club, established in 1958, presents taarab music – Swahili style – at its best. The orchestra will be joined by a special guest: taarab queen and 95 years old living legend Bi Kidude (full name: Fatuma Binti Baraka), who is the leading symbol of Swahili traditional taarab and Unyago music...

"The word taarab derives from the Arabian language and means “to be moved, agitated”. Taarab is linked to the trance state of dancers during religious or ceremonial rites. According to local legend, the Sultan Seyyid Bargash bin Said was the first to introduce Arabic instruments to East Africa by bringing taarab musicians from Egypt to Zanzibar at a time when the island was ruled by sultans of Oman in the 19th century. The medium for taarab poetic singing is the Swahili language which finds its roots in Arabic and Eastern Bantu. Long melody lines and vocals similar to Arabic or Indian singing characterize taarab music. Poly-rhythms with influences from Latin music blend together in a complex way in this mix of East African and Western music."


The festival offers free tickets, to an outdoor concert, The TEJUN-HA Festival: “Songs of Imaginary Far East Islands” at Miyake-jima in Tokyo featuring musicians working with electronic musician, Miwa Masahiro who will be creating "imaginary folk music."


Previous ........... Next
Back to Ten Thousand Things index page...