Tajima Tadashi

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Shingetsu Cho 07:15 Tools
Shika No Tone 07:46 Tools
Hon Shirabe 05:43 Tools
Tsuru No Sugomori 11:29 Tools
Koku 15:39 Tools
Yamagoe 04:52 Tools
San'an 07:52 Tools
Ukigumo 11:29 Tools
Shikyoku Ichiban, "Poeme I pour shakuhachi et koto" 15:37 Tools
San'An (Wish for an Easy Delivery) 07:51 Tools
Yamagoe (Beyond the Mountain) 04:51 Tools
Hon Shirabe (Basis for Enlightment) 05:43 Tools
Ukigumo (Floating Clouds) 11:29 Tools
San An 07:51 Tools
Tsuru No Sugomori (Nesting of Cranes) 11:29 Tools
Shika No Tone (Distant Calls of Deer) 07:46 Tools
Shingetsu Cho (Mode of the Moon in the Earth) 07:15 Tools
Shingetsu Cho (Mode Of The Moon In The Heart) 07:15 Tools
Koku (The Empty Sky) 15:38 Tools
Hon Shirabe (Basis Of Enlightment) 05:43 Tools
Shika no Tone (Distant Calls Of The Dear) 07:47 Tools
Honshirabe (Basis for Enlightenment) 05:44 Tools
Shakuhachi 15:38 Tools
Hon Shirabe (original tuning) 05:18 Tools
Shingetsu (Heart Moon) 06:18 Tools
Nesaza Shirabe 02:57 Tools
Hon Shirabe (Basis for Enlightenment) 05:43 Tools
Koku (Empty Sky) 13:37 Tools
Tamuke (Offerings) 05:35 Tools
Sigari Ha (Falling Leaf) 03:51 Tools
Daha No Kyoko (PoundingWave Piece) 05:14 Tools
Yamagoe (Going Over the Mountian) 04:18 Tools
Kokuu (Empty Sky): Koku (The Empty Sky) 15:39 Tools
Yamagoe (Going over the Mountain) 15:39 Tools
Kokû (The Empty Sky) 15:38 Tools
本調 Hon Shirabe [Basis for enlightment] 05:43 Tools
浮雲 Ukigumo [Floating clouds] 05:43 Tools
鈴法 Yamagoe [Beyond the mountain] 04:51 Tools
Shingetsu chô (Mode of the moon in the heart) 07:15 Tools
Shika no tône (Distant calls of deer) 07:46 Tools
Shika No Tone (Distant Cry of the Deer) 07:46 Tools
鶴の巣籠 Tsuru No Sugomori [Nesting of cranes] 07:46 Tools
Tsuru no Sugomori (Nesting Of 07:46 Tools
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Tadashi Tajima (田嶋直士) was born in Sakai, Osaka in 1942. He began to study shakuhachi upon entering the Kinko School, where he trained with Chikuho Sakai in mastering the classical shakuhachi honkyoku (the term honkyoku refers to the solo shakuhachi music that was developed in the 17th and 18th centuries by Zen monks as a form of spiritual practice and meditation). Later in Tajima's development, Sakai was moved by Tajima's passion for playing and introduced him to a new master, Katsuya Yokoyama. At the age of 29, Tajima began studying with Yokoyama who, although originally from the Kinko School, had studied a number of years with an idiosyncratic musician by the name of Watazumi who emphasized using very long flutes and added a lot of breathiness to the resulting sound. Yokoyama made this style popular among shakuhachi players and devotees, and Tajima is considered to be one of his best and most well-known students. Mr. Tajima has performed and traveled around the world, including North America, China, Europe and Australia. He was awarded the grand prize for traditional Japanese music at the Pan Musik Festival, and the achievement award for Osaka's Theatrical and Musical Arts Organization. In addition to traditional concert settings, Mr. Tajima has also experimented with playing the shakuhachi in various spatial and sonic locations including an oratory at a Shinto shrine, on the surface of a lake, and inside a cave. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.