BETWEEN LOCAL AND GLOBAL
Ideologies, practices and protagonists of the SHAKUHACHI in Japan and European countries.
(M.A. in Ethnomusicology of Asia)
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
Japanese traditional music
1 Hōgaku: a brief view
2 Methods of transmission: iemoto seido e ryū-ha
3 Traditional methods of learning
PART I
The shakuhachi: a general description
I.1 Typologies
I.1.1 Origin
I.1.2 The ancient shakuhachi: gagaku shakuhachi
I.1.3 The shakuhachi of Middle Ages: hitoyogiri e tenpuku
I.1.4 The modern shakuhachi: fuke shakuhachi
I.1.5 The shakuhachi of the Twentieth century: takō shakuhachi and ōkurauro
I.2 Making and pratical tecniques
I.2.1 Description of the instrument
I.2.2 How to play the shakuhachi: basic tecniques
I.3 Repertory and notation
I.3.1 Shakuhachi 'music'
I.3.2 Oral mnemotechniques and semiography
PART II
From religious instrument to musical instrument
II.1 Komusō and Fuke shū
II.1.1 Institution of Fuke sect
II.1.2 Secularization of fuke shakuhachi and decline of the sect
II.2 The main schools
II.2.1 The schools linked with suizen tradition and Chikuho-ryū
II.2.2 Kinko-ryū and some of its sub-groups
II.2.3 Tozan-ryū and Ueda-ryū
II.3 Developments of the Twentieth century
II.3.1 Shin Nihon ongaku, Shin hōgaku and Gendai hōgaku movements
II.3.2 New compositions: Chikurai goshō and Taiwa godai
II.3.3 The role of NKH and Tōkyō geijutsu daigaku in musical education
PART III
The shakuhachi in contemporary Japan
III.1 New approachs to tradition
III.1.1 The internationalization of shakuhachi
III.1.2 New generations, new bias
III.1.3 Some protagonists of the present scene
III.2 The shakuhachi on-line: presentation and analysis of some websites
III.2.1 Tozan-ryū
III.2.2 Chikuho-ryū
III.2.3 Ueda-ryū
III.2.4 Chikumei-sha
III.2.5 Chikuyū-sha
III.2.6 Kokusai shakuhachi keshū-kan
PART IV
An European shakuhachi 'identity'?
IV.1 Musical globalization
IV.1.1 From world music to appropriation of shakuhachi
IV.1.2 A trasmission without borders
IV.2 The diffusion of shakuhachi in Europe
IV.2.1 The coming in the Old World
IV.2.2 Players groups and European activities
IV.2.3 Websites of some organizations
IV.3 Ethnography
IV.3.1 The shakuhachi in the shadow of TAV
IV.3.2 Prague European shakuhachi festival
CONCLUSION
BIBLIOGRAPHY