Taiko Study Guide
Taiko Study Guide
Taiko Study Guide
TAIKOPROJECT
PO Box 825
Monterey Park, CA 91754
213 268-4011
[email protected]
www.TAIKOPROJECT.com
youtube.com/TAIKOPROJECT
facebook.com/TAIKOPROJECT
twitter.com/TAIKOPROJECT
Much can be learned about different cultural traditions and lifestyles by experiencing its
music. The TAIKOPROJECT performs contemporary Japanese American taiko drum-
ming. It is an artform drawn from our Japanese ancestry, but nurtured in America by
multi-generational Asian Americans in search of a voice for their dual-culture identity.
Through the sharing of our music and stories, we share our pride in our heritage and
culture, and encourage others to have pride in and explore their own cultural back-
grounds, and those of others.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Home (2003)
choreographed by Michelle Fujii
TAIKOPROJECT:(re)generation
Origins of Japanese Taiko
photo by Robert Meyers
History of American Taiko
Many Sides (2003)
composed by Masato Baba
TAIKOPROJECT:(re)generation Musical Instrumentation
photo by Robert Meyers
Kuchi Shoga
Oral Tradition
Taiko Glossary
Additional Resources
ORIGINS OF JAPANESE TAIKO
The Japanese word taiko (tye-koh) literally means drum. The taiko has been used
in Japanese life and culture for centuries. One of its earliest known uses was to deter-
mine the boundaries of a village. A village was as large as the powerful sound of its
taiko could carry. In the 6th Century, in battle, beating the taiko was used to give
courage to samurai warriors and to intimidate the enemy. Taiko is also found in more
formalized areas of Japanese culture, such as in Kabuki and Noh theatre and the tradi-
tional Gagaku music of the Imperial Court.
Taiko also plays an important part in religious activities in Japan. In Shintoism, all natu-
ral phenomena, the mountains, fire, water, and animals are thought to contain a spirit of
a deity or god. The taiko is often used as a voice to call these gods to give thanks to
them or pray to them. They believed that their music was an offering to these deities,
which would bring them good fortune. For this reason, taiko was often at the center of
folk festivals. Farmers played the taiko believing that its thunder would bring rain for
their crops. Fishermen played the taiko to request a bountiful catch. In other festivals
the taiko is played to dispel evil spirits, ward off sickness, or give thanks for prosperity.
In Buddhism, the taiko is considered the voice of the Buddha, along with the horagai, or
conch shell.
The modern kumi-daiko (group drumming) ensemble started after World War II in
Japan. Daihachi Oguchi, a jazz drummer discovered taiko and was captivated by its
power. In the early 50s he started what is considered to be the first taiko group,
Osuwa Daiko, in Nagano, Japan. Taiko groups were formed all throughout Japan since
Gagaku/Bugaku that time, in large part to a desire to return to traditional Japanese arts and culture.
courtesy of Kinnara
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HISTORY OF AMERICAN TAIKO
In North America, taiko started in 1968 when Seiichi Tanaka, who recently moved from
Japan, saw the San Francisco Cherry Blossom Festival and noticed there wasnt any
taiko. Shortly thereafter, he started the first American taiko group, the San Francisco
Taiko Dojo, based on his studies of taiko and martial arts in Japan. In 1969, Rev.
Masao Kodani and George Abe, two sansei (third-generation Japanese American)
Buddhists were putting away the temple taiko from its once-a-year appearance at the
summer-time Senshin Obon festival, when they decided to continue playing the drum.
After hours of pounding on the taiko, they were tired, sweaty, hands bleeding, and they
decided they should play taiko more often. Thus was born the first bonafide
Japanese American taiko group. Rev. Kodani formed the taiko group without Japanese
formalities such as an established teacher or hierarchical leadership system and
formed a philosophy of playing taiko according to Jodoshinshu Buddhist philosophy.
Young Asian Americans took to taiko immediately, and with the influence of these first
two groups, taiko groups formed across North America, such as San Jose Taiko (San
Jose, CA 1973), Soh Daiko (New York City, NY 1975), and Katari Taiko (Vancouver,
Canada - 1979). There are now over 150 taiko groups throughout North America.
Taiko groups in North America are noted for their creativity and innovation in developing
a distinctively American style of playing taiko. Incorporating world rhythms, dance,
music, theatre, and storytelling, American taiko is an exciting, young artform that contin-
ues to thrive and become more and more diverse. Not only do those of Japanese
ancestry play taiko, but Asian Americans, and Americans of all ancestries play taiko--
Seiichi Tanaka (c. 1970) anyone can play!
San Francisco Taiko Dojo
courtesy the artist
However, like everything else, taiko is not without its issues. Current issues in the
Conference Booklet (1997)
1997 North American Taiko North American taiko community include the copyrighting of songs, movements, and
Conference Booklet
design by Qris Yamashita styles of taiko, the need (or not) for a governing taiko organization like in Japanese
martial arts like karate or judo, the idea of a taiko competition.
Kinnara Taiko (c. 1970)
Kinnara Taiko
courtesy the artist
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ARTICLE ONE
The following article from the Los Angeles Times contains a
good retelling of the history of American taiko by Teresa
Watanabe. She wrote this article as a feature on the 1999
North American Taiko Conference.
LOS ANGELES TIMES We have classical dance and tea and a means for villagers to com-
A Taiko Tradition: Bang the Drum ceremony, things that are very municate with one another. In
Loudly precise and proper. But taiko is Japanese folk tradition, Kodani
by Teresa Watanabe, exciting and dynamic; its musical said, taiko also represents regen-
Staff Writer but also visceral. eration, with the drumsticks as a
July 30, 1999 male symbol and the drum,
Today, the appeal of taikos raw female.
Thirty years ago, two people fell power and commanding roar,
prey to the lure of the Japanese mesmerizing choreography and It was not until the 1950s, howev-
big drum. colorful costuming has moved far er that taiko began to develop as
beyond the Japanese American a performing art in Japan, and
In San Francisco, a martial artist community. then independently in the United
from Japan attending a local cher- States a decade later.
ry blossom festival noted the stark Taiko groups now consist of drum-
absence of the taiko, the thunder- mers of all races, who perform at Kodanis Senshin Buddhist
ous drum that is a fixture at most venues from public schools to Temple, near USC, was central in
every Japanese community cele- Carnegie Hall. The distinctive popularizing taiko by inventing a
bration. taiko drumbeat is now featured in way to make drums inexpensively
Hollywood commercials and from wine barrels, rather than the
In Los Angeles, a Japanese movie soundtracks, including traditional method of carving out
American Buddhist priest putting Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home whole pieces of wood. The inno-
away the temple taiko after an and The Thin Red Line. A vation allowed groups to make
annual Bon Odori summer festival plethora of taiko styles now mix taikos for about $400, rather than
wondered why this glorious instru- dance and theater, salsa and jazz, the Japanese price of a couple
ment should stay shuttered away with the traditional Japanese thousand dollars for a small drum
but for a few nights a year. drum. to $70,000 for a huge one,
Yamami said.
Within months of each other, The proliferation of taiko groups
Seiichi Tanaka and the Rev. has even sparked an emerging Many Groups, Many
Seiichi Tanaka Masao Kodani had formed taiko set of issues that will be Interpretations
San Francisco Taiko Dojo performance groups at opposite addressed at the conference.
courtesy of The Rafu Shimpo ends of the stateand pioneered They include the ethics of imitat- For the nearly 100 groups that
a Japanese American art form ing styles and songs, whether a now flourish in North America,
Jeanne Mercer that has exploded in popularity formal organization should govern taiko variously represents an art
Shasta Taiko today and will be featured at the the burgeoning number of groups form, a spiritual path, a cultural
courtesy of the Los Angeles
North American Taiko Conference, and how to safeguard the tradi- expression and a political state-
Times
which begins today in Little Tokyo. tions Japanese roots as the art ment.
Johnny Mori
moves into the mainstream. Most taiko groups in America are
Kinnara Taiko The conference, which is expect- searching for some kind of root in
courtesy of the Los Angeles ed to draw more than 500 taiko How do you copyright a particular their ancestry, said Mt. Shasta
Times drummers, manufacturers, and movement? Is this going to stay musician Russel Baba, who,
fans from the United States, a Japanese American cultural along with his wife, Jeanne
Canada and Japan, willfeature a thing? These are all questions Mercer, has played taiko for 27
variety of workshops, demonstra- people need to talk about, said years and is leading a pilot train-
tions, and discussions. Two con- Johnny Mori, a taiko pioneer who ing program for young drummers
certs will be held Saturday and plays for the jazz group Hiroshima this week in Los Angeles.
Sunday at the Japan America and Kinnara, the group based at
Theatre. Kodanis Senshin Buddhist The development of taiko as a
Temple. community art paralleled the civil
As Japanese Americans, we did- rights movement and the quest for
nt have any arts that were pas- Shrouded in folklore and myth, ethnic identity. For many, Mori
sionate and physical, said Bryan taiko is said to have been brought said, taiko was one way to re-
Yamami, a conference organizer to Japan from China thousands of embrace a cultural heritage that
with the Japanese American years ago as a Buddhist ritual many cast aside in shame follow-
Cultural and Community Center. tool, an instrument of court music ing the internment of Japanese
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ARTICLE ONE continued
Americans during World War II. who dont measure up. seems to give many practition-
ers, however, one of the men
But Mori and other members of In recent years, however, Tanaka who started it all warns against
Kinnara (which translates as has added meditation and the taiking it all too seriously.
Buddhist celestial music) see Chinese art of energy movement
taiko performance primarily as a known as qigong to his curricu- Its just a cow skin sheet over a
way to practice Buddhist princi- lum. He now sees drumming as wine barrel, Kodani said with a
ples of interdependence, of rec- a path to a healthy life, deriving laugh.
ognizing the ego and moving power from the inner forces
beyond it. Kinnara members do rather than raw physical strength.
not strive for musical perfection; Although his San Francisco Taiko
talented showboats are nudged Dojo will not be performing this
aside in favor of those with fewer weekend, Tanaka will be leading
skills but greater humility, Kodani two workshops today and
said. Saturday.
Shimedaiko
The Shimedaiko is made from a wooden
body, stretched with rope or with metal bolts.
It is tightened higher than any other taiko,
From top: Odaiko
and its piercing tone cuts through the low
Chudaiko
Okedo pitches of the other taiko drums.
Shimedaiko
Uchiwadaiko From top: Chappa
Bachi
Uchiwadaiko and Atarigane
Yokobue
Photos provided by The Uchiwadaiko is a drumhead stretched
Asano Taiko Company, Ltd.
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Homemade Taiko
When taiko first began in the United States, many groups had to make their own drums
due to the high expense of purchasing a taiko from Japan. Thus the invention of the
American-style wine barrel taiko came into being. In addition to being a necessity,
making ones own drum taught the taiko player their first important lesson to respect
the instrument.
The intention of this activity is to create your own instruments in order to form your own
taiko ensemble. While doing this process, the students will also potentially feel a
sense of pride and respect towards their own personal taiko.
Student Outcomes:
Create your own drumsticks and drum
Learn about the process of making an instrument
Learn how to respect your own instrument
Conclusion: After this activity, your class will be ready to create your own taiko ensem-
ble! Proceed to the following exercises.
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WHAT IS RHYTHM?
Rhythm is something that repeats itself, aurally, visually, or physically. You can hear
rhythms everywhere---when it rains, you hear the rhythms of rain hitting roofs of build-
ings, when you pass a construction site, you hear the rhythms of the jackhammer hit-
ting the ground, and when the telephone rings.
When you can see rhythms, they are called patterns. You can see a pattern in a suc-
cession of traffic lights down the street, in rows of windows of a wide building, and even
in the pages of a book when you flip them from back to front.
Finally, you can make rhythms with movement. Almost anything you do creates
rhythm. Walking creates rhythms with your arms, your legs, and your whole body.
When you eat something, your chewing creates a rhythm (and a tasty one, at that!).
Put your hand over your heart. This is your own unique, personal rhythm!
Musically, rhythm is defined as organized beats greouped in patterns which are repeat-
ed. Rhythm is one of the basic elements of music.
Anticipatory Set: Go over the three types of rhythms and have students identify rhythms
that they have experienced.
Activity: Have the students stand up and form a circle. Explain that you are all going to
play a rhythm together, starting with a basic stomp walk. In an easy tempo, guide stu-
dents to walk in unison, right, left, right, left until they are all together. Once they
have the stomp walk together, then have everyone clap on each step. Then clap
every other stepthen every third stepand finally every fourth step. Once theyve
tried all of these, try this simple pattern with clapping while still doing the basic stomp
walk:
clap once every four steps four times
clap once every three steps four time
clap once every two steps four times
clap once every step four times
and repeat!
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WHAT IS RHYTHM? continued
Once they have mastered this, then have them try passing around a pulse in the cir-
clebegin with the stomp walk in place, then once your basebeat is set, designate a
student to start the pulse and the direction (clockwise or counter-clockwise), and start
with one clap and send it around, keeping in time with the stomp walk. Be sure they
do not speed it up and explain that if even if the person in front of them doesnt get it,
try to keep the rhythm going. If this goes well, you can try two variations:
sending around two pulses (after one is set and traveling around, have the same stu-
dent or yourself send around a second pulse)
change direction of the pulse with a triple clap (you facilitate this, once the pulse is
traveling, after a clap, clap three times fast, with the third clap ending on the next per-
sons clap, upon which the pulse will change direction)
If they master this, you can take the next step and have students do a four
count improvisational call-and-response. Start this the same way, with the
stomp and then, one by one each student has four counts to clap any rhythm,
and then the class tries to repeat with the same rhythm. Immediately after the
class is done repeating, the next student gives the four-count call and the class
responds.
Conclusion: After the activity, go over learning points and encourage students to come
up with new rhythm patterns with stomping and clapping and prep them for Activity 2.
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KUCHI SHOGA
Most taiko players learn songs through kuchi shoga. Kuchi means mouth and
shoga means to sing. Literally, taiko players learn how to sing the taiko songs and
then transfer that song into playing it on the drum. It is one of many styles of learning
music and can be notated verbally and written. Each verbal sound represents a sound
made by the drum and a time value.
Don (dohn) Hard right hand strike to the drum head (1/4 note)
Dogo (doh-goh) Hard right/left strikes to the drum head (2 1/4 notes)
Tsu (tsoo) Soft right hand strike to the drum head (1/4 note)
Tsuku (tsoo-koo) Soft right/left strikes to the drum head (2 1/4 notes)
Ka (kah) Hard right hand strike to the drum rim (1/4 note)
Kara (kah-rah) Hard right/left strikes to the drum rim (2 1/4 notes)
Pattern Two
Don Kara Don Kara Don Kara Kara Kara
R R L R R L R R L R L R L
1 2 3 4
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Exercise 2: Learning Kuchi Shoga!
Anticipatory Set: Go over definition of kuchi shoga and vocalize with students the
vocabulary of taiko kuchi shoga.
Activity Part One: Starting with Renshu Pattern One, sing the patterns out with
the students. Clap on the numbered beats to help keep them together, remind
them to listen to each other and to sing the patterns strongly and in time.
Once they can sing Renshu Pattern One, go over the hand movements, which
are just right-left through the pattern. See notation for R & L denoted beats.
Have students sing and play patterns simultaneously. Repeat process for
Pattern Two, which is a little trickier. If they get through both, try splitting
them into two groups and going back and forth, and then even further, to have
one group sing/play Pattern One, while the other sing/plays Pattern Two twice
(since Pattern one is twice as long). If they get this, then try speeding up the
tempo!
Conclusion: After this activity, you can go into two directions. If the students have
homemade instruments, they can create sounds and songs on them. If you are pro-
ceeding to the next exercise without homemade instruments, you can run the exercises
with just vocal drumming/soings, or use found instruments to create songs and rhyth-
mic patterns.
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ORAL TRADITION
In many folk music traditions throughout the world like Africa, India, Japan, etc., learn-
ing music was transmitted orally. The music was taught by using a verbal vocabulary,
which represented the sounds of the instrument. In the previous kuchi shouga lesson,
you were introduced to this vocabulary used for taiko.
Within this activity, your class will create your own oral vocabulary. Then you can cre-
ate your own taiko songs!
Slowly create longer rhythms. If adventurous, begin to join some of these rhythms.
This will create a song. Some easy formats are AABA, ABA, ABCD, and ABACA
Student Outcomes
Students will create their own vocabulary for sounds
Students will create their own taiko songs.
Conclusion: By now, students have learned the origins of Japanese taiko, the history of
American taiko, they have experienced rhythm patterns first-hand, and have
created their own sounds, and arranged them into short song patterns! Now, they are
ready to see the show! Encourage them to try to pick out aspects of previous
lessons in the show and musical patterns in the taiko songs and to relate their own cul-
tural origins to the stories and music of our Japanese American style of taiko drum-
ming!
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GLOSSARY
RESOURCES
TAIKOPROJECT
School Show, Kyrene Pueblo TAIKO GROUP WEBSITES
Elementary School, Arizona
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