Shakuhachi! – SOLD OUT –
The flute’s journey from bamboo thickets and Zen temples to the concert halls of the world
Shakuhachi (Japanese: 尺⼋) is a Japanese traditional end-blown flute made of bamboo. It was probably introduced to Japan in the 8th century by Buddhist Zen monks who used the instrument to combine meditation, breathing exercises and music making.
In Japan, the shakuhachi is thus associated specifically with the Zen Buddhist komusō monks, who, until the 19th century, wandered around Japan in search of enlightenment by concentrating on the sound of the shakuhachi flute. Very little of the music created by the Komusō monks has survived, but one of them is the Kinko-ryū -honkyoku collection, which is the oldest known collection of Komusō monk music. It includes some 36 compositions, most of them nature themed.
Shakuhachi is still widely used in meditative music but, nowadays, also in world music ensembles, jazz and pop music and Western art music. The programme of the concert at the Sibelius Museum consists of traditional and newer shakuhachi music.
PROGRAMME
Hélène Seiyu Codjo
Acceptance
Otto Eskelinen and Sakari Heikka
Arrangement of Finnish folk song: Soittajapaimen
Emmanuelle Rouaud and Henri Algadafe (guitar)
Contraction, Expansion, Resolution ou les Rêveries Cosmologiques d’un Promeneur égaré’ for shakuhachi, electric guitar and electronics. (Contraction, Expansion, Resolution or the Cosmological Musings of a Lost Walker). First public performance.
Kiku Day
Daiotsu-gaeshi
Naoko Kikuchi
Kotona (composed by Tomi Räisanen http://www.TomiRaisanen.com)
Riley Lee
San’ya (Three Valleys)
Gunnar Jinmei Linder and Naoko Kikuchi
Sato no Haru (composed by Kikuoka Kengyō for shamisen + vocals)
Yasunori Tani, Riley Lee, Emmanuelle Rouaud, Hélène Seiyu Codjo
Echoes of the Taiga (composed by Marty Regan)
Yasunori Tani
Ochiba
The service fee applies to tickets purchased from Lippupiste.