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Hina Matsuri Joshi-kai Concert” by Yoko Fujimoto


Hina Matsuri Joshi-kai (Doll’s Festival Ladies Get-Together) Concert

This spacious, beautiful cafe was the perfect place for my concert. I think it was a comfortable, peaceful and refreshing time for all of us there. Thank you very much to all of you who came along and everyone who helped prepare for the concert.

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa

The day before this dog cafe concert, the organizer Noriko had me over to stay at her home. We made lyric sheets together, admired her dolls on display, and celebrated the concert in advance by sampling the sweet sake that would be provided at the concert venue.

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa

I wore a new pink costume with flowers on it especially for the Doll’s Festival, to feel like a young girl again.

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa

I sang songs filled with flowers, from good old songs to little pieces by Beethoven.
I played the koto (harp) to accompany three of the songs. One of them was about my beloved dog, Kintoki, may he rest in peace.

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa
The audience sang along with me, following the lyric sheets we had prepared. Their kind, warm sound echoed throughout the venue.

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa
This time, I chose to perform pieces that I just learned or had just revisited anew, so I battled against my age and memory skills to prepare for the concert. But through this experience, I fell in love with popular songs like “Sekai ni Hitotsu Dake no Hana” and “Hana wa Saku” and I would like to keep singing them from now on, too.

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa
Little Tora came the concert and listened my songs quietly. What a cutie! Thanks for coming. See you again!

Photo: Mizuho Hasegawa

This is Hideko, the owner of Deco’s Dog Cafe. She is looking forward to our next special event together. I am happy to hear that!

Next time, I’ll have a concert that boys can come along and enjoy, too.

Photos: Mizuho Hasegawa

yoko_s


“‘Mystery’ Performance in Montreal” by Ryoma Tsurumi


Mar. 7 (Sat) Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Photo: Yui Kawamoto

The “Kodo One Earth Tour 2015: Mystery” North America Tour started in late January and we are currently in Canada. In North America, the climate differs from area to area, and so far Canada is the coldest of all, with temperatures plunging below minus 20 degrees. Sado is pretty cold, but here in Canada, this was my first time to experience such severe cold.

Photo: Yui Kawamoto

Even though it was a freezing outside, so many people came to see our performance in Montreal and the 3000-seat theater was a full house! We had such a great audience, so we felt wonderful and gave a really feel-good performance.

Photo: Sergei Bachlakov

“Mystery” performance in Vancouver(Photo: Sergei Bachlakov)

ryomatsurumi

 


 

スクリーンショット(2015-03-13-11.20.56)
Eri Uchida appeared on “CP24 Evening Breaking News” on Toronto TV
[Articles about Mystery]
English
Irish Film Critic
True Tall Taiko Tales
Book View Cafe
Irish Film Critic
True Tall Taiko Tales
Book View Cafe
thestar.com (Performance in Toronto, Canada)
tokyo-flow (Eri Uchida Interview)
French
Quebec Spot
SORS-TU?

20150127oet

“Kodo One Earth Tour 2015: Mystery” North America Tour
http://www.kodo.or.jp/oet/index_en.html#schedule13a


Mar. 18 Appearance on TV Kanagawa “tvk Arigato”


Appearance on TV Kanagawa “tvk Arigato” (Thanks tvk)

On Mar. 18 (Wed) at around 13:10, Kodo will appear live on TV program “tvk Arigato.” If you live in Kanagawa, we hope you’ll tune in!

tvkmember

TV Kanagawa “tvk Arigato”
Mar. 18 (Wed) *Kodo will appear around 13:10–13:25.
Appearances: Yuichiro Funabashi, Mitsuru Ishizuka, Tsuyoshi Maeda, Rai Tateishi

Program Website: http://www3.tvk-yokohama.com/arigato/

This week we have two Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi” performances in Yokohama, on Mar. 19 & 20!

These two performances are almost completely sold out. If you want to see “Michi,” don’t delay! Call for your tickets today!
Inquiries: tvk Ticket Counter Tel. 0570-00-3117 (Weekdays 10:00–18:00) http://www.tvkcom.net/

▶Watch on YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1N2ME9rH4E

news20150319michi
Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi”

Mar. 19 (Thu)–20 (Fri), 2015 Yokohama, Kanagawa
http://www.kodo.or.jp/news/20150319michi_en.html

Director: Motofumi Yamaguchi
Performers: Eiichi Saito, Tomohiro Mitome, Yuichiro Funabashi, Mitsuru Ishizuka, Kenta Nakagome, Tsuyoshi Maeda, Rai Tateishi, Maya Minowa, Ryosuke Inada, Reo Kitabayashi, Masaya Koike, Mizuki Yoneyama (Cast subject to change)
Programme: Zoku, Jang-Gwara, Chonlima, Michi, Shamisen, Monochrome, Miyake, Sankan Shion, Yamauta, O-daiko, Yatai-bayashi

“Ebisu Daikoku Live” by Yosuke Oda


Mar. 8 “Ebisu Daikoku” Live

Former “The Blue Hearts” drummer Tetsuya Kajiwara and I (Yosuke Oda) joined forces to create a new unit, “Ebisu Daikoku.”

Photo: Taro NishitaPhoto: Taro Nishita

I had been looking forward to March 8, the day of the debut of “Ebisu Daikoku,” for quite a while. Actually, we had been talking about this project for about 4 years, so it was a long wait. Our concept was to form a band rather than just having a jam session. We wanted to create an entire performance together. So we took the time to discover each other’s timing and breathing and how we drum and play taiko. We compared drum and taiko rhythms and found where they intersect and where we had fusion difficulties. We made use of tiny windows of opportunity in our schedules to create pieces and rehearse together. For our debut performance, we invited guitarist Isaku Suzuki to join us.

Photo: Taro NishitaPhoto: Taro Nishita

We powered through the performance with drums roaring like thunder, taiko howling like gales, and the guitar conjuring an array of different scenery throughout. That hour flew by, but I was left with an unforgettable feeling that will remain with me forever.
yosuke_s
http://www.kodo.or.jp/news/20150308ebisudaikoku_en.html


“Rehearsals for Kodo Interactive Performance in Bunkyo” by Kenta Nakagome


Photo: Erika Ueda

Here are some pictures from our rehearsals prior to the Kodo Interactive Performance held in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo, on March 7.

Photo: Erika UedaPhoto: Erika Ueda
Photo: Erika UedaPhoto: Erika Ueda

Many thanks to everyone who came to see our performance!

Photo: Takashi Okamoto
kenta_s

Kodo Interactive Performances Schedule
http://www.kodo.or.jp/oet/index_en.html#schedule14b

 


[DADAN 2015] Message from Yuichiro Funabashi


Tickets Now on Sale for “DADAN 2015”!

dadan2015

Tickets for the upcoming Kodo “DADAN 2015” performances in Asakusa, Tokyo, are on sale now.
Here is a message from Yuichiro Funabashi about “DADAN 2015.” (In Japanese)

Watch on YouTube

Kodo “DADAN 2015” Performances
June 10 (Wed)–15 (Mon), 2015 Asakusa Public Hall, Taito Ward, Tokyo


Full Dress Rehearsal on Sado Island for “Michi”


KODO2015-FB04-michi_ja

We will hold performances of Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi” in Yokohama on March 19 & 20.
On March 12, we had a full dress rehearsal on Sado Island. We invited some of our friends on Sado Island to be the audience for this rehearsal, so if you came along, thank you very much for joining us!

Photo: Erika UedaPhoto: Erika Ueda
Photo: Erika Ueda

These two performances are almost completely sold out. If you want to see “Michi,” don’t delay! Call for your tickets today!
See you there in Yokohama!

▶Watch on YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1N2ME9rH4E

news20150319michi
Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi”

Mar. 19 (Thu)–20 (Fri), 2015 Yokohama, Kanagawa
http://www.kodo.or.jp/news/20150319michi_en.html

 

Director: Motofumi Yamaguchi
Performers: Eiichi Saito, Tomohiro Mitome, Yuichiro Funabashi, Mitsuru Ishizuka, Kenta Nakagome, Tsuyoshi Maeda, Rai Tateishi, Maya Minowa, Ryosuke Inada, Reo Kitabayashi, Masaya Koike, Mizuki Yoneyama (Cast subject to change)
Programme (TBC): Zoku, Jang-Gwara, Chonlima, Michi, Shamisen, Monochrome, Miyake, Sankan Shion, Yamauta, O-daiko, Yatai-bayashi

“Uto Taiko Matsuri” by Yoshikazu Fujimoto


On Feb. 19, Motofumi Yamaguchi and I visited some TV stations and a radio station in Kumamoto to promote “Uto Taiko Matsuri.” We gave a mini live performance at each station.

IMG_0628

We visited Kumamoto Castle on the way. I was very impressed.

 

I led a taiko camp from Feb. 20 (Fri) to 22 (Sun), and on the final day, the participants had a recital at Uto Taiko Matsuri to show everyone what they had learned during the camp. Each year, this recital is the first act at the festival. First, we sang “Hobashira Okoshi Ondo” and then we played a new piece called “Narukami, which means “Thunder God.” The ten participants, including three local high school students, had joined me there from all over Japan. I was really pleased that they all took part. Some of them were just beginners, but I had them play simple base rhythms and we were all able to play together.

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Just before the performance with the Taiko Camp participants. We performed in pink “Uto Taiko Matsuri” t-shirts.

yoshikazu_s


“In Preparation for ‘Michi'” by Tsuyoshi Maeda


Feb. 14, 2015

Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi”

Photo: Erika UedaPhoto: Erika Ueda

This month we began our rehearsals for Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi,” which will be held at KAAT Kanagawa Arts Theatre in Yokohama on March 19 & 20. The programme is nothing but “Kodo classics.” We have taken the pieces that Kodo has honed over the past decades and let our current members recreate them.

For a couple of years, we have been working on all kinds of new challenges and taken a break from the fundamentals of Kodo to date, such as our signature pieces and costumes. With that distance comes new realizations about things until now that had never occurred to us before. It has been a period for us to find out about what defines us as “Kodo” beyond our name.

Photo: Erika UedaPhoto: Erika Ueda

Now, at this particular point in time, we will hold this special concert, Michi, which means “road” or “path.”

Chonlima, Monochrome, Miyake, O-daiko, Yatai-bayashi. We have taken a look at an array of classic Kodo pieces anew. Personally, I deeply feel that a special Kodo aura radiates from within each of these “classic Kodo performance” pieces.

Photo: Erika Ueda

During our rehearsals for Michi, the senior members remind us about our stance, the nuance of each rhythm, how to approach the taiko mentally and emotionally, and they performed with us for the first time in quite a while. This really emphasized to me where my weaknesses lie, and it also made me realize just how high our seniors have set the bar with their own skills.

Rehearsing feels like I’m banging into a wall that I can’t climb over yet, and while I completely frustrate myself everyday, I can also feel a fire burning my belly ignited by motivation. In any case, I am learning a lot every day.

Photo: Satoko Maeda
In Japanese, onkochishin is a phrase we use at times like these, which means “to attempt to discover new things by studying the past.” I can reaffirm what is important for Kodo, what Kodo must never lose, through these rehearsals for Michi. And I want to make a good use of what I learn in brand new creations, too.

tsuyoshi_s

 

▶Watch on YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1N2ME9rH4E

news20150319michi
Kodo 2015 Special Concert “Michi”

Mar. 19 (Thu)–20 (Fri), 2015 Yokohama, Kanagawa
http://www.kodo.or.jp/news/20150319michi_en.html

 

Director: Motofumi Yamaguchi
Performers: Eiichi Saito, Tomohiro Mitome, Yuichiro Funabashi, Mitsuru Ishizuka, Kenta Nakagome, Tsuyoshi Maeda, Rai Tateishi, Maya Minowa, Ryosuke Inada, Reo Kitabayashi, Masaya Koike, Mizuki Yoneyama (Cast subject to change)
Programme (TBC): Zoku, Jang-Gwara, Chonlima, Michi, Shamisen, Monochrome, Miyake, Sankan Shion, Yamauta, O-daiko, Yatai-bayashi

“Some Lessons I Have Learned from North American Taiko Groups” by Tomohiro Mitome


Mar. 1, 2015

Hello, everyone! How are you all doing?

This is Tomohiro Mitome, leader of taiko performing arts ensemble Kodo.

March is here and it is getting warmer and more comfortable day by day. While we are happy that spring has arrived, some of us are unfortunately suffering from hayfever here at Kodo Village.

The “Kodo One Earth Tour 2015: Mystery” North America Tour started at the end of January and is now over halfway through its two-month-long journey. In North America, there are many people who have been very kind and helpful to us since the days of Kodo’s antecedent group, “Sado no Kuni Ondekoza,” in the 70’s. They are members of taiko groups in the USA and Canada.

Photo: Taro Nishita

At one of the 2005 North America tour performances

I heard a lot of stories about North American taiko groups from senior Kodo members before I had even joined Kodo, many of which are featured in the Kodo 30th Anniversary Publication Inochi Moyashite, Tatakeyo – 30 Years of Kodo – (in Japanese). In this blog post, I am going to write about my own personal experiences. I was last on tour in North America about eight years ago. At that time, I recall that their style of taiko featured traditions that had been passed down for generations and in addition, a new “North American taiko style” was beginning to emerge.

Photo: Taro Nishita

In Kodo’s early years, our ensemble toured in North America every year and the local taiko groups at each performance destination helped us so much and welcomed Kodo with great warmth. Among those many groups, one in particular, San Jose Taiko in California, even let us use their rehearsal space to store our stage props and tour equipment.

Photo: Mitsunaga Matsuura
Recently, both San Jose Taiko and Kodo have experienced a shift in generations, and now Kodo’s senior members don’t go abroad on tour very much. So, one year San Jose Taiko organized a time for us to sit down together in a circle and talk to each other (pictured above). They arranged this opportunity because they felt that it was necessary for us to reignite our communication and exchange, in order to understand more about each group’s history, about taiko, about the Japanese-American community in the U.S., and to discuss the past, present and future ties between Kodo and San Jose Taiko.

When we visited them and watched them rehearse, I was very impressed by their solid etiquette and good manners, such as bowing before they stood on the tatami mats and began their practice. Kodo can practice any time, so we did not create a “boundary line” like that to shift our mindset before our practices. But now, since experiencing that, we have changed our own habits and now we create the right environment and mindset when we begin our practises, for example, by putting on tabi (split-toed socks or shoes). That visit made me realize that they really treasure their Japanese identity and uphold their Japanese culture and spirit by passing it on to new generations.

Photo: Taro Nishita

Pictures from North America Tour in 2005. (Former Kodo member Kaoru Watanabe is in the middle of the picture above.)

Photo: Taro Nishita

Photo: Taro Nishita

When we go abroad, we need to have sound knowledge of Japanese culture so that we can explain it to others, but that is no easy task. We recognize a lot about ourselves during our overseas tours by comparing the differences between our cultures and lifestyles. One thing I noticed is that in Japan we are good at arranging different foreign culture, such as cuisine, to best suit Japanese people.

I hope that the 2015 North America tour members have been discovering and learning many things on this tour, too.

tomohiro_s

20150127oet

“Kodo One Earth Tour 2015: Mystery” North America Tour
http://www.kodo.or.jp/oet/index_en.html#schedule13a

Promotion Video for Kodo One Earth Tour: Mystery at BAM

Promotion Video for Kodo One Earth Tour: Mystery at Mesa
mesa

Kodo Article on The Huffington Post

Kaoru Watanabe Interview on BAM Blog


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