Okinawan Folk-Pop Duo Sakishima Meeting to Perform at Japan Society in New York

Sakishima Meeting
Sakishima Meeting

 

Okinawan folk-pop duo Sakishima Meeting is set to perform on Friday, December 12 at 20:30 (8:30) pm at Japan Society. Sakishima Meeting is comprised of Yukito Ara on vocals and sanshin (Okinawan shamisen) and Isamu Shimoji on guitar and vocals. The band will perform a live, cabaret-style show in Japan Society’s Murase room. This concert is part the fourth and closing performance in The Shamisen Sessions, a multi-month celebration of the music and history of the Japanese musical instrument.

Susan Hamaker, founder of the website JapanCultureNYC.com and the president of the Okinawa American Association of New York, will lead an informal pre-performance talk on Okinawan culture and history at 19:30 (7:30pm). Okinawan food and drink will be available for purchase and dance is both welcome and encouraged.

As the southernmost islands of Japan, Okinawa Prefecture’s isolated location and its history of independence have led to musical traditions that differ from Japanese norms. One particular distinguishing trait of Okinawan musical tradition is its use of the sanshin, a three-stringed musical instrument that shares the same origins as the mainland Japan’s shamisen.

An early form of the sanshin was first introduced in the 14th century to the Ryukyu Islands (present-day Okinawa) from China, where it was called the sanxian, then entered mainland Japan at the end of the Muromachi period (1338-1573) where it evolved into the shamisen, often recognized by Westerners as similar in design to the banjo. One noteworthy feature of the sanshin is that it is covered with snakeskin (whereas the shamisen is covered in cured hide), lending the instrument its colloquial name, “jabi (snake-skin) sen.”

 

 

Okinawan culture has always shown particular fondness for its hometown songwriters; indeed, a common preconception of the Okinawan people among mainland Japanese is as accomplished musicians, with a particular emphasis on their lyrical prowess. Over the past few decades, Okinawan music has grown in popularity and has been increasingly performed and acclaimed both within and outside the Japan region, with the world-traveled Sakishima Meeting at the forefront of the modern Okinawan folk scene.

Sakishima Meeting‘s playing style incorporates ancient Okinawan traditions with more modern Western performance approaches, presenting updated pop takes that utilize the Okinawan scale. Sometimes known as the Ryukyuan scale, the Okinawan scale is the pentatonic “C-E-F-G-B-C”, which differentiates itself from mainland Japan’s major pentatonic scale (“C-D-E-G-A-C”), the predominant mode for most Japanese traditional and folk music. Even longtime pop aficionados will find new twists in the band’s truly unique compositions and smooth melodies.

Author: World Music Central News Room

World music news from the editors at World Music Central

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