Kōjō no Tsuki
荒城の月
[ジャンル] | 現代音楽 |
[流派] | Min'yo |
[対象楽器] | 滝 廉太郎 - 箏 - 1901 |
荒城の月 は下記のアルバムに収録されています
アルバム | アーティスト | |
Bamboo Spirit |
尺八 : Peter Ross | |
Challenging Eternity Disk 05 |
箏 : 中島 靖子 | |
Endless Sea - Impressions of Japan |
尺八 : John Singer | |
Flower Dance - Japanese Folk Melodies | ||
The music, which opens with koto, is the Kojo no tsuki composed by Rentaro Taki in 1901. The title signifies the moon viewed from a desolate castle. It is one of the oldest Japanese songs written on the Western scale. Bansui Doi wrote a poem to this music at the Aoba castle in Sendai.
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Flute and Koto of Japan |
三弦 : 米川 敏子 尺八 : 山口 五郎 | |
Hana - Shakuhachi; Nihon no Shijo |
尺八 : 宮田 耕八朗 | |
Isaac Stern - The Classic Melodies of Japan |
尺八 : 山本 邦山 | |
Japan Revisited |
尺八 : 小野 衛 | |
Koto and Shakuhachi |
箏 : Shirley Kazuyo Muramoto 尺八 : 立花 茂生 | |
Koto Music of Japan | ||
Koto no Kyoshu Nihon no Merodi-shu |
箏 : 米川 敏子 箏 : 二代米川敏子 箏 : 辻本親登代 尺八 : 杉沼 左チ雄 箏 : 米川めぐみ | |
Koto no Miryoku - Disk 2 |
箏 : 山内 喜美子 | |
Koto no Shirabe - In Memory of Miyagi Michio |
箏 : 牧瀬 喜代子 | |
Memories of My Home |
尺八 : 皇保 | |
Moonlit Castle |
尺八 : John Singer | |
Music of Japan |
尺八 : 宮田 耕八朗 | |
An arrangement for a shakuhachi and orchestra of a melody composed by Rentaro Taki (1879-1903). He is well known to Japanese people as an earliest composer of Western music in Japan. He composed many nice songs for primary and middle school pupils, and they are quite popular among Japanese still now. "Kojo no Tsuki" is one of them. Kojo is a ruined castle and tsuki is the moon. The poem for the original song describes the moonlight over the ruined castle and expresses the longing for the days when the castle was prospering. | ||
Musical Memories of Japan | ||
Nihon no Shirabe |
尺八 : 三橋 貴風 箏 : 沢井 忠夫 | |
Sankyoku Gassō Dai Zenshū vol. 24 (三曲合奏大全集24) |
尺八 : 難波竹山 | |
Shakuhachi - Japanese Traditional Music |
尺八 : 上村象山 | |
"Kojo no Tsuki" ("The Moon Over the Lake"), is a duet composed by Nakao Tozan in 1922 at his home during a late fall evening in Tokyo. It depicts the cool autumn air as it whips up small ripples on a lake, each of which reflects the moon. The latter half of the piece features a 3/8 rhythm which suggests the moonlight as it wavers on the waves. This piece was the first to utilize three-beat rhythm in shakuhachi music.
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Sound of Japan |
尺八 : 三橋 貴風 | |
Tozan Ryu - Shakuhachi Dai Zen Shu - Vol 1 |
尺八 : 島原 帆山 | |
Tozan Ryu - Shakuhachi Honkyoku |
尺八 : 植村 章山 | |
Tozan Ryu Shakuhachi Honkyoku Shu - Vol 2 |
尺八 : 二世 星田 一山 | |
View From Here, The |
尺八 : Peter Ross |