Contrary to the claim in the video, Gigaku has completely defunct since the 19th century. It had been under a steady decline since the early middle ages, and during its last days it consisted of a mere march by the musicians with no dances. It was the establishment of the modern Japanese state and accompanying summoning of classical musicians to the new palace that nailed the final nail in the coffin of this ancient art.
The masked dance portion of Gagaku is no longer performed in Japan. The musical portion of Gagaku, is still performed on state occasions and annually at the National Theater of Japan, according to the Imperial Household Agency. In addition, Tenri University in Nara has a Gagaku educational program to keep the musical part of the tradition alive.
During the Heian Period, women of high rank should be very reserved, so they could not dance. Remembering that these dances were only performed at court and in temples. Hope this helps.
The previous answer is not correct, women did dance during heian period. Sei Shonagon, a lady in waiting who lived back then, describes dances performed by young girls at court in her diary.
The masked Bugaku dances have always been performed by male dancers only. Both historically and today, unmasked dances have been designated as performed by male or female dancers, depending on the dance.
The unique sound of gagaku that you hear is produced by several wind instruments, most prominently the hichiriki, a kind of oboe, and the shō, a kind of free reed aerophone.
This is so beautiful! Thank you for uploading!!
Contrary to the claim in the video, Gigaku has completely defunct since the 19th century. It had been under a steady decline since the early middle ages, and during its last days it consisted of a mere march by the musicians with no dances. It was the establishment of the modern Japanese state and accompanying summoning of classical musicians to the new palace that nailed the final nail in the coffin of this ancient art.
The masked dance portion of Gagaku is no longer performed in Japan. The musical portion of Gagaku, is still performed on state occasions and annually at the National Theater of Japan, according to the Imperial Household Agency. In addition, Tenri University in Nara has a Gagaku educational program to keep the musical part of the tradition alive.
Well explained ! ❤️
Good lesson
Were these dances originally only performed by male performers?
During the Heian Period, women of high rank should be very reserved, so they could not dance. Remembering that these dances were only performed at court and in temples. Hope this helps.
The previous answer is not correct, women did dance during heian period. Sei Shonagon, a lady in waiting who lived back then, describes dances performed by young girls at court in her diary.
The masked Bugaku dances have always been performed by male dancers only. Both historically and today, unmasked dances have been designated as performed by male or female dancers, depending on the dance.
What instrument makes that striking noise?
The unique sound of gagaku that you hear is produced by several wind instruments, most prominently the hichiriki, a kind of oboe, and the shō, a kind of free reed aerophone.
Putting Timestamps for a project
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The music derived from BeiQi dynasty of china
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도라 더 키드 병 낫게