Happy New Year

Jan. 1, 2022

New Year’s Greeting from Kodo Ensemble Leader Yuichiro Funabashi

I wish you all a very happy new year!

We celebrated Kodo’s 40th anniversary last year. We were really pleased to be able to hold commemorative tours and school tours, along with special events including “Inochi” with Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, and concerts at Bunkamura Orchard Hall.

Being able to share our sound with audiences in person again made 2021 a joyous year for us, despite the ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Your support and encouragement gave us strength, and I want to sincerely thank all of you for cheering us on.

Last year we released new albums and DVDs, and shared our sound and spirit with the world through a range of offerings online including Kodo Taiko School, digital streaming, and our Heartbeat Radio series. While travel was restricted, we were so happy to connect with people far and wide in through these projects.

2021 was a milestone year, marking four decades of history for Kodo. We felt the immense power of that history throughout the year. It will drive us forward as we step into the next decade, heading towards Kodo’s 50th and 100th anniversaries. In 2022, we will continue to broaden the possibilities of taiko expression as we tackle new challenges head on.

We look forward to sharing time and space with you all this year. We also look forward to learning more here on Sado Island, and bringing the sound of Kodo to people all over Japan and around the world.

I sincerely hope that 2022 is a great year for each and every one of you.
I kindly ask for your continued guidance and encouragement.

 

Yuichiro Funabashi
Leader
Kodo Taiko Performing Arts Ensemble

Happy New Year

Jan. 1, 2023

Photo: Takashi Okamoto

New Year’s Greeting from Kodo Ensemble Leader Yuichiro Funabashi

I wish you all a very happy new year.
I would like to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to everyone who offered us their support throughout the past year. Thank you very much indeed.

In early 2022, we traveled throughout Europe with “Kodo One Earth Tour: Tsuzumi,” venturing overseas for the first time in two years. Here in Japan, we were delighted to be back in theaters and schools with “Kodo One Earth Tour: Warabe” and our School Workshop Performance tours. We returned to Asakusa Public Hall for a summer concert series with “Shoso,” bringing people together in Tokyo and online via the livestream. Our summer also featured two dream collaborations: one with Niigata dance company Noism, touring throughout Japan with Noism x Kodo “Oni”; the other with guitarist Miyavi and shamisen player Hiromitsu Agatsuma on the main stage at Earth Celebration 2022. It was truly joyous to perform in front of live audiences again over the past year. We released new albums, DVD, video, and digital music offerings throughout the year to reach and delight people further afield, too.

We are still feeling the effects of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, but we are pressing onwards with determination. Looking back, it’s been hard but it’s all been worthwhile. I am grateful to each serendipitous encounter and experience to date that has helped us keep going. We have kept honing our skills and creating new works.

Looking ahead, we are going to hit the ground running in 2023. On the 5th, Kodo will return to the stage with Kabuki luminary Tamasaburo Bando for the first time in five years in “Yugen,” giving performances throughout January at Osaka Shochikuza Theatre. At the end of the month, our One Earth Tour will return to North America for the first time since 2019, performing “Tsuzumi” in 24 cities over the course of two months. In February, we look forward to presenting the inaugural “Kodo One Earth Music Festival,” where we will collaborate with senior high school taiko groups to present our One Earth Music compositions on stage in Tokyo. From spring, we will be touring in Japan with our new work “Cycles,” and presenting a further two new productions: “Calling” directed by Ryotaro Leo Ikenaga, and a yet-to-be-announced work directed by Yoshie Abe towards the end of the year. At home on Sado Island, we look forward to welcoming locals and visitors to workshops, taiko experience sessions, our Special Performances in Shukunegi in spring, and annual festival Earth Celebration in summer.

As we continue to live, learn and create on Sado Island and on the road, we can feel new depth and richness in the sounds we create with taiko. As those rich tones echo out, they help us create spaces filled with joy and smiles. Through our ongoing One Earth Tour, and everything we do, our mission is to remind people that we are all connected as human beings. We will strive to make our performances uplift people, reminding everyone present that we are all one community. One Earth.

I sincerely hope this year is a great year for you and yours.
I kindly ask for your continued guidance and encouragement throughout the year ahead and beyond.


Yuichiro Funabashi
Leader
Kodo Taiko Performing Arts Ensemble

Happy New Year

Jan. 1, 2024

New Year’s Greeting from Kodo Ensemble Leader Yuichiro Funabashi

I wish you all a very happy new year.
I would like to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to everyone who offered us their support throughout the past year. Thank you very, very much.

Last year, we toured in the USA and Canada with “Kodo One Earth Tour: Tsuzumi” and China with “Kodo One Earth Tour: Warabe,” returning to these countries for the first time in four years. Here in Japan, we toured with main stage productions “Calling,” “Shoso,” and “Cycles,” as well as our School Workshop Performance tours. We also held three concert series here on Sado in the spring, summer, and autumn. We enjoyed a wide range of thrilling collaborations, which included: “Yugen” with Kabuki actor Tamasaburo Bando, “Oni” with Niigata dance company Noism, “Hatsune Miku x Kodo” with vocaloid Hatsune Miku, and our long-awaited reunion concert with The Voices of South Africa on the main stage at Earth Celebration 2023. The list goes on. It sure was an action-packed year of performances.

In 2023, many of the Kodo concerts that were postponed during the COVID-19 pandemic were able to go ahead at long last. The year was filled with joyous reunions with collaborators and audiences, and feeling of profound gratitude as we shared the sound of our taiko with more people in person.

We’ll begin 2024 with our “Warabe” Europe Tour during the winter months. From spring, we’ll perform throughout Japan with our One Earth Tour and School Workshop Performances, followed by the premiere of “Evermore,” a new work we will present exclusively at Asakusa Public Hall. At the end of this year, we are excited to share another new touring production with you all. At home on Sado Island, we look forward to welcoming locals and visitors to our Special Performances in Shukunegi in spring, and our annual festival Earth Celebration in summer. We will also hold the Kodo Summer Concerts and Autumn Concerts that we launched in 2023, hoping to share more of the charms of Sado Island with everyone who comes along.

With the chaos of wars and the impact of climate change, it is difficult to predict what lies ahead. But I promise we will keep striving to foster a world where myriad cultures and ways of life resonate with one another. Kodo will remain dedicated to its mission to connect people, traveling the globe with taiko under the banner “One Earth.”

I sincerely hope that the year ahead is a great one for all of you.
2024 is the Year of the Wood Dragon, and we’ll do our very best to make it a year of great growth.
I kindly ask for your continued guidance and encouragement.

 


Yuichiro Funabashi
Leader
Kodo Taiko Performing Arts Ensemble

“Kodo Duo Masayuki & Yuta” by Yuta Sumiyoshi

Nov. 26, 2017

Photo: Takashi Okamoto

The duo of senior performer Masayuki Sakamoto and new comer Yuta Sumiyoshi (that’s me) was first formed in 2012 for the piece Kusa-wake in the “Amaterasu” production. For the five years that followed, I think I have spent more time than anyone else watching Masayuki perform in pieces such as Kei Kei, Hekireki, Kaden, and Dan.

Photo: Takashi Okamoto

I am grateful for the fact that I often was given the chance to perform right opposite Masayuki.

Photo: Mayumi Hirata

We played the piece Kusawake in Amaterasu, at Kanamaru-za, in “Mystery,” and “DADAN”.

That means we must have played that piece together in front of an audience over four hundred times to date.
Masayuki often said, “I wonder how many times we’ll play that together again…”
So when the day came when I said to myself, “There’s only two times to go!,” I felt a wave of emotion well up inside me.

Photo: Takashi Okamoto
Soon after I joined Kodo, Masayuki returned from Kodo’s Europe tour in the springtime and I trained under his instruction for the first time.

I seem to recall we were working on the shime-jishi taiko part of the piece SHAKE

However, what we were focusing on wasn’t phrasing or strokes. It was the atmosphere you create before you drum.
If you know SHAKE, then you probably know what that means, because SHAKE begins with a lead-in by the shime-jishi drum. Masayuki taught me that before you play the first beat, you should feel as though you are gathering the eyes and ears of the hundreds of audience members to all focus on your two hands.

“When you want to diffuse or draw in energy, you express that by changing the angle of your chest!” 
Even now, I still recall his words when I take the stage.

Photo: Takashi OkamotoI open up my chest when I move forward, and I drop my chest when it’s my turn to perform the backing part. The accents of the sound, and expression using my chest, it’s really about the music and your body speaking the same language.

Masayuki and I often enjoyed drinks together. Whether we were in Japan or abroad, he often took me out for drinks. (Or maybe I was the one who said “Let’s go!” more often than not…)
The first time Masayuki came to the Kodo dormitory to drink with me, I was so happy to drink with him that I drank too much in the first half hour and collapsed, so poor Masayuki was left drinking alone.
When it was Masayuki’s 30th birthday, I planned a huge BBQ in the garden at Kodo Village for him.

Photo: Takashi Okamoto
When we drink together, we talk a lot. It ranges from rambling about this and that to talking in depth about taiko. I got to know Masayuki’s character and nature, I learned about the mottos he holds dear, and we had a lot of silly fun together.

Our memories include the time we went to a yakiniku (BBQ) restaurant that wasn’t all-you-can-eat, and panicked in horror at the tremendous bill we racked up.
The time I went shopping with indecisive Masayuki to chose his new guitar.
The time we jumped in the sea, but the waves in the Sea of Japan were so powerful they threw us up onto the rocks.
We became hooked on having jam sessions with me on ukelele and Masayuki on guitar.
One time, we went for a run together before going out to drink German beer so the effects of the two activities would cancel each other out. This led us to come up with a saying that compares the quality of a “zero” from not doing something to the qualilty of the “zero” you get by canceling things out.
Each one of these memories were seeds we sowed that brought us closer together as colleagues and led to our perfectly matched sound on stage.


Masayuki is a guy who turns fake stoicism into his reality.
No matter how light his clothing and how cold he looks, he will say, “I’m not cold.”
No matter how tough the situation or how pale his face goes, he will say, “It’s a breeze.”
He is competitive about weird things, so even if he isn’t interested in something, if you cheer him on he will get in there and do it.

Photo: Ryotaro Leo Ikenaga
I sincerely respect Masayuki and I still look up to him.
He is a down-to-earth, friendly senior member who makes me always want to be at his side.

Photo: Takashi Okamoto
Masayuki is going to graduate from the Kodo group, and that means that I am going to graduate from playing with Masayuki.
My goal all along has been to stand out more than Masayuki, and now I am going to graduate from spending my days standing alongside him on stage.
There’s only two performances left. Niigata and Sado.

The “DADAN 2017” tour will continue throughout December, but Mitsuru Ishizuka and I were double-cast for this tour and Mitsuru is taking over for the December performances. So I will only perform two more times with Masayuki before the changeover.

Whether I cry or smile about it, there’s just two times to go.

Please, come and see our Niigata performance!

Please, come and see our Sado performance!

“DADAN 2017” Japan Tour

*Please note that this blog was translated after the two performances listed above.


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