Michio Miyagi

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Haro no Umi (for Violin and Harp) 00:00 Tools
Haru no Umi 09:13 Tools
Sakura Henso-kyoku 00:00 Tools
Rokudan 05:57 Tools
Sarashi fu-teguruma 00:00 Tools
Se Oto 05:22 Tools
Midare 07:18 Tools
Sarashifu Tegoto 00:00 Tools
Rain In London (Rondono Ame) 00:00 Tools
Ocean in Spring (Haru no Umi) 00:00 Tools
Mit Tsu no Asobi (three plays) 00:00 Tools
Windchime 00:00 Tools
Rain in London 00:00 Tools
Haru no Umi (The Sea in Spring) 00:00 Tools
Haru no Umi (The Sea in Spring): Haru No Umi 00:00 Tools
Spring Sea 00:00 Tools
Sakura Variation 00:00 Tools
Seoto 00:00 Tools
Sarashi 00:00 Tools
Sarashi Fu Tegoto 00:00 Tools
London no Yoru no Ame 00:00 Tools
Tegoto 00:00 Tools
Seoto: The Sound of Rapids 00:00 Tools
Three Children's Play Songs 00:00 Tools
Mit Tsu No Asobi 00:00 Tools
Haru-no-umi 00:00 Tools
Ochiba No Odori 00:00 Tools
Chidori no Kyoku [The Plovers] (Full length version) 00:00 Tools
Ocean In Spring 00:00 Tools
London In The Rain 00:00 Tools
Horu No Umi 00:00 Tools
Haru No Umi (Spring Sea) 00:00 Tools
Sakura hensokyoku さくら変奏曲 00:00 Tools
Midare Rinzetsu 00:00 Tools
Sakura Henso Kyoku 00:00 Tools
Mizu No Hentai 00:00 Tools
Haru No Umi (The Sea of Spring) 00:00 Tools
Isazu-gawa (Isuzu River) 00:00 Tools
aki no koto no ha 00:00 Tools
aki kaze no kyoku 00:00 Tools
Chidori No Kyoku 00:00 Tools
Japanese Lullaby, Horu No. Umi 00:00 Tools
Isazugawa (Isuzu River) 00:00 Tools
Rodukan 00:00 Tools
The Sea in Springtime 00:00 Tools
Rondon no yoru no ame (Evening Rain in London) 00:00 Tools
Sarashi-fu tegoto 00:00 Tools
The Sea In Spring, With R.Cheme, Violin 00:00 Tools
Sakura Vriations 00:00 Tools
Sea of Spring 00:00 Tools
Aki No Kotonoha (Autumn Poem) 00:00 Tools
Sakura hensokyoku 00:00 Tools
Ochiba No Odori (Dance Of Fallen Leaves) 00:00 Tools
春の海 00:00 Tools
Mizu no hentai (Metamorphosis of Water) 00:00 Tools
Mushi no Musashino (The Musashino with its Insects) 00:00 Tools
rokudan no shirabe 00:00 Tools
Koma no Haru 00:00 Tools
Maritsuki 00:00 Tools
Chidori No Kyoku (The Plovers) 00:00 Tools
Rokudan No Shirabe (Music Of Six Steps) 00:00 Tools
The Sea in Spring 00:00 Tools
Aki no shirabe (Autumn Music) 00:00 Tools
Sekirei (Wagtail) 00:00 Tools
Kumo No Anata-ni (The Clouds Over Yonder) 00:00 Tools
Esashi Oiwake 00:00 Tools
Aki No Shirabe 00:00 Tools
Das Meer im Frühling 00:00 Tools
Godan Ginuta 00:00 Tools
Onoe No Matsu 00:00 Tools
G-dan Ginuta 00:00 Tools
Haru no Umi 春の海 00:00 Tools
Michio Miyagi - Haru No Umi, for koto & violin (1929) 00:00 Tools
Isuzugawa “The Holy River of Isuzu” 00:00 Tools
Haru No Umi (Sea In Spring) 00:00 Tools
Haru no Umi (The Sea in Spring) (arr. E. Alkula and S. Junnonen for flute and kantele) 00:00 Tools
Furin 00:00 Tools
Kumiutahu 00:00 Tools
Rinzetsu 00:00 Tools
Three Frolics 00:00 Tools
Haru no Umi (Lisa Daoust, flute & Marie-Josee Simard, percussion) 00:00 Tools
Haru no yo (Spring Night) 00:00 Tools
Chidori no Kyoku (The Plovers) (Full length version) 00:00 Tools
Disguised As A Silverer Of Mirrors 00:00 Tools
Sakura Variations 00:00 Tools
Kazoe Uta Hensokyoku 数え唄変奏曲 00:00 Tools
Rondono Ame 00:00 Tools
Benisobi 00:00 Tools
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Michio Miyagi (宮城道雄, April 7, 1894 - June 25, 1956) was a Japanese musician, famous for his koto playing. He was born in Kobe. He lost his sight in 1902, when he was 8 years old, and started his study in koto under the guidance of Nakajima Kengyo II, dedicating the rest of his life to the instrument. In 1907 he moved with his family to Incheon, in southern Korea. When he was 14 years old, in 1909 he finished his first composition, Mizu no Hentai. At 18 he reached the rank of kengyo, the highest rank for a koto performer. Miyagi moved to Tokyo in 1917, and in 1919 he did his first recital of his own compositions. In 1920, he took part in the Great Recital of the New Japanese Music with Seifu Yoshida and Nagayo Motoori. He was reckoned as an authority in the new Japanese music, achieving notability in the early Shōwa period. In 1925 he participated in one of the first radio presentations in Japan, and in 1929 he signed an exclusive contract with Victor Record Company, current JVC. He composed his most famous piece, Haru no Umi (The Sea in Spring), in 1929. In 1930 he became a lecturer at the Tokyo College of Music (current Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music), until he was appointed professor in 1937. In 1932 French violinist Renee Chemet visited Japan on a concert tour. After hearing Miyagi perform Haru no Umi Chemet arranged the shakuhachi part for violin, which she and Miyagi then recorded for distribution in Japan and Europe. He gained worldwide notability after the issuing of his albums in Japan, USA and UK. After the Second World War, in 1948, he was appointed to the Academy of Arts of Japan. On 25 June 1956 he died after falling from a train in Kariya, Aichi during one of his tours. He wrote more than 500 pieces, improved Japanese string instruments, and invented new kotos with 17 strings (bass koto) and 80 strings. He was also an essayist, and published more than ten books including Ame no Nenbutsu. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.