Tilopa

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
2x2 05:36 Tools
hi fu mi 04:52 Tools
yamato choshi 03:29 Tools
Ichi 10:15 Tools
Kyo-piano-sus 05:35 Tools
kyushu reibo 06:30 Tools
kyo choshi 05:06 Tools
By The Way 07:40 Tools
Nana 10:10 Tools
El Corazon Canta 05:56 Tools
kyo rei 12:51 Tools
Kyotaku Klangschale 04:58 Tools
1x3 07:13 Tools
ajikan 08:34 Tools
Red Fullmoon 07:36 Tools
Go 06:01 Tools
Amigos De Viaje 13:25 Tools
Shi 11:09 Tools
One Day in May 10:51 Tools
Chinese Princess 05:40 Tools
Ni 08:03 Tools
Hachi 05:41 Tools
San 09:34 Tools
Heeyahoa 10:29 Tools
Roku 08:42 Tools
Shakuhachi Shrutibox 06:05 Tools
Meifrui I 10:32 Tools
Morningwalk 05:17 Tools
Wings Over Water 10:28 Tools
Neo-Traditional No. 1 10:25 Tools
Glasrohrstuck 07:36 Tools
Moving On 07:36 Tools
Avanti 08:07 Tools
By The Ganges 18:54 Tools
Meifrui II 10:09 Tools
HiFuMi-Chor 06:01 Tools
Schlicht 1 07:49 Tools
shakuhachi/shrutibox 07:49 Tools
Meing 03:28 Tools
Power of Now 13:55 Tools
Insight Out 07:30 Tools
Not Two 12:38 Tools
Inner Game 05:52 Tools
Unravelling 05:52 Tools
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TILOPA plays the Japanese flute called kyotaku, from the Zen Buddhist honkyoku musical tradition. This flute is sometimes called the Zen flute in the USA. Tilopa has studied quite a wide range of different musical instruments since early childhood (recorder flutes, violin, guitar, piano, dillruba, svarmandal, santoor, and so on), but found his real love about 20 years ago when he met with the kyotaku and his flute master Koku Nishimura in Kumamoto, Japan. For those 20+ years, Tilopa has studied traditional honkyoku music with his master Koku sensei, and Koku's son, Koryo Nishimura. He has also done some experimental meshing of kyotaku with other eastern and western instruments. The kyotaku is also known as Japanese Zen flute or long shakuhachi. It has pentatonic tuning and five (5) holes like the shakuhachi, but the kyotaku has a deeper, mellower sound. The kyotaku was commonly played until the 20th century, at which point the shakuhachi began to eclipse the kyotaku. Simultaneously, kyotaku evolved from an instrument of meditation (mainly used by a certain Buddhist sect of wandering monk called komuso, into an instrument of secular music. Tilopa's master, Koku Nishimura, was one of the first to revive the old Zen tradition of kyotaku. Tilopa recently collaborated with Sangeet Sieben, a versatile guitarist, on an improvisational recording called Pictures of Silence, a live field recording of improvisational sessions for an art exhibition in Cologne. Tilopa currently resides with his family in rural Bavaria, where he works as a kyotaku maker and teacher. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.