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Weblog of Kaoru Watanabe, NY based Flute/Fue player

Back from Mongolia!

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We're home!  The Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble was in DC for a lecture/dmonstration at the Japan Information and Culture Center and a performance at the Kennedy Center.  Both shows went well with warm responses from the audience.  In general, I would say that people are more exposed to Japanese culture and music- whether it be taiko, manga, sushi or cherry blossom festivals.  Perhaps not so much the morin khuur, aireg, or the Naadam festival- although perhaps if the KTE does well, things will change and elementary school kids in Brooklyn will learn throat singing during music class. I'd like to thank the members and families of Nen Daiko and Rev Kaz for housing KTE during our stay in DC.  We are running on a tight budget and have been surviving mainly through the help of so many loving friends and supporters.

with Nen Daiko

The last few days we have spent getting over jet lag and preparing for some upcoming shows.  There will be a school show wed morning (the 13th) at Aaron Davis Hall, followed by a concert at Symphony Space on fri.  I threw together a last minute show for thursday night featuring the three taiko players of KTE, Tetsuro, Shoji and myself and Nominjin, a huge pop star in Mongolia who due to a strange turn in events ended up being the official KTE translator.

Here is a listing of upcoming stuff:

Thursday, October 15thNominjin, Tetsuro Naito, Shoji Kameda and Kaoru Watanabe Nakanaka@DROM $15 at the door/$10 in advance!! 85 Ave A (below Takahachi) NY, NY 10009

Friday. October 16
Peter Norton Symphony Space, Broadway at 95th Street, NY, NY
8:00 pm concert www.worldmusicinstitute.org
Tickets: 212-545-7536

Saturday, October 17
Charles B. Wang Center, Stony Brook University, L.I.
MASTER TAIKO WORKSHOP WITH TETSURO NAITO, SHOJI
KAMEDA, KAORU WATANABE
12 noon-2pm.
Tickets: www.stonybrook.edu/wang
Information:  wangcenter@stonbrook.edu
Call 631-632-4400
Saturday, October 17
Charles B. Wang Center, Stony Brook University, L.I.
8:00pm Concert
Tickets: www.stonybrook.edu/wang
Information:  wangcenter@stonbrook.edu
Call 631-632-4400
Sun., October 18
Japan Society, 333 E 47th Street.
TAIKO WORKSHOP WITH TETSURO NAITO,
12:30-2:30pm (SOLD OUT); 3:00-5:00pm. www.japansociety.org/performingarts
Box office: 212-715-1258

Mongolian Tour Report Day 10

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[gallery] Today was one of the best days of my life!  We went out for a drive deep into the countryside for a picnic, saw the new towering Genghis Khan statue, rode a horse, pet some goat and sheep, ate lots of homemade food in a gher and went to a music shop where I bought limbe flute music, Mongolian music CDs and a mouth harp.  It was our last full day in Mongolia and it finally felt like we arrived in the country after being in Ulaanbaatar for two weeks.

We have Shinetsog and his parents to thank for the picnic.  We ate horse meat, potatoes, coleslaw, various types of tart cheese type foods and washed it down with shots of Genghis Khan Vodka.  His brother had brought a whole vat of airag (fermented mares milk) fresh from the countryside the day before and I fell in love with the stuff- ignore what I said about it in a previous post- and drank a decent quantity of it.  Later on, inside the gher, I was partaking in various milk teas, tart buttery, and cheese like dishes.  Even though I'm lactose intolerant, I couldn't help it: not only did I want to be polite in the face of such hospitality, but also the fact that I would rarely ever again have a chance to each such foods in such a location?

A few interesting things I saw: how they charged their cell phones, watched tv and listened to the radio all by solar electricity; the outhouse that consisted of four low wooden walls and a hole in the ground with many years worth of stuff piled high; the herd of sheep and goats that went into the gher when no one was looking at ravaged the table of food we had been eating; a sheep that drank from a goats teat- apparently the sheep had lost it's mother right around when the goat lost it's child and they just found each other; a lifestyle with close to no carbon footprint- burning animal dung for cooking, making butter by wrapping the cream in dried intestine skin, not bathing, killing and making your own meat, etc etc.; the generosity of people who are willing to open their homes to and literally share all they have in the world with complete strangers.

Mongolia Tour Report Day 9

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A taiko school and ensemble is beginning here in Ulaanbaatar which will be lead by Mr. Huluguu and his compatriots.  The drums were donated by the Miyamoto Unosuke Co of Tokyo and the inaugural workshop was given by Tetsuro, Shoji and I.  We started off with Tetsuro leading a session in how to take care of the drums, putting together stands, tightening the drums, putting the drums on the stands, etc.  Shoji then lead them through SF Taiko Dojo's Seiichi Tanaka sensei's standard practice piece, Renshu Daiko.  The kids were all training to be percussionists so were very quick to pick things up and were absolute joys to work with. By the way, I had my first sip of fermented mare's milk.  I had heard so many stories about how incredibly bitter it was and how it gave everybody diarrhea.  Hearing all these horror stories, I somehow got it in my head that it was an incredibly potent alcoholic drink.  Anyways, before the workshop started, Huluguu was drinking something white out of a regular plastic bottle.  I asked what it was and to my surprise he was drinking the legendary stuff right in the afternoon.  Oh, so it wasn't alcoholic?  Not really was the answer.  I tried some and it WAS incredibly bitter and tart but I only had a sip to get the taste so I ended up fine on the other end.  Other than that, my first encounter with fermented mare's milk after all that giddy anticipation was stunningly anti-climatic.  Of course, I did drink it out of a plastic bottle so it was probably wasn't the best stuff and I hear that it's less tart the fresher it gets and that I probably should try some fresh.  Despite all I said, it was crazy to see Huluguu was just downing the stuff as if he'd just spent 50 days crossing the Gobi.

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In the evening, we were invited to Tserendorj's home outside the city.  He has recently opened a beautiful place where people can stay and experience Mongolian culture without having to deal with the dust, the animal dung and lack of flushing toilets.  In his multi-storied building there was an actual Ger inside the front room while the dining room was decorated to feel like the inside of one, with felt walls held up with colorfully painted latticework.  There were musical instruments, riding equipment, old tools lining the walls and the room was set up so Tserendorj and his son Soyol could entertain guests with their music.

Tserendorj, who is seventy year olds, is the only traditional Mongolian magtaal (praise song) singer living in Ulaanbaatar.  He is also recognized as Mongolia's official morin khuur (horse-head fiddle) player, an extremely distinguished title considering the morin khuur is Mongolia's official instrument.  Tonight, he spoke at length with passion, knowledge and pragmatism about his efforts to carry on traditional Mongolian music and culture.  In every sense of the word this man is a living embodiment of that tradition and he carries himself with the great dignity and esteem he holds for the art.  He is always either dressed in an impeccable suit and cowboy hat or in traditional garb, even when walking the streets of Manhattan as he did ten years ago and will do so again in a couple of weeks.  It is an honor to be performing with such an esteemed figure and it was beautiful to see him performing with his 28 year old son, a man who will continue the tradition for decades to come.

Among the many pieces Tserendorj performed for us, he improvised magtaal in commemoration of the evening, and for his new found friend "Miki san" the koto player.  It was an unforgettable evening and for that I heartfully thank Tserendorj and his beautiful family.

Mongolia Tour Report Day 8

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Final concert in Ulaanbaatar was tonight.  Although attendance wasn't quite what we hoped it would be, the music and energy and flow of the performance was great.  Although there is still some work to do, the group has really grown into a cohesive unit in the last few days.  The pieces have developed their own personalities and feelings- something completely different from what they had been.  The Ode to Ulaanbaatar praise song has been augmented with koto to give it an even livelier bounce to it.  The sound of Miki's koto blends with that of the morin khuur in such an organic way that there is absolutely no culture clash- yet it retains it's distinctively Japanese sound- this I feel is due to Miki's wonderful interpretation and sensitivity. I really can't express enough thanks to all the people who made the concert possible- Huluguu, volunteer students from the Music and Dance School, Khaan Bank, Nomin, Asel, Byamba, and everyone at ACM and many others that I am remiss in not naming here.

Mongolian Tour Report Day 7

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I haven't written in my journal in a few days due to a intense rehearsal schedule, compiled with a multitude of mini crises, much time spent traveling, loading and unloading instruments and LOTS of time waiting for Mongolians who among their many wonderful traits, do not list good punctuality as one of them.  Here is a listing of some of  what the last few days have consisted of: rehearsals, press conference, rampant tardiness, people disappearing inexplicably, someone making or accepting a phone call in the middle of rehearsal, the arrival of the Miyamoto Unosuke taiko (hooray), having to move all those extra taiko, the securing of more daytime rehearsal time, getting noise complaints due to the added daytime rehearsals, a press conference in a large room where I sat with diplomats and heads of cultural institutions being interviewed by maybe five reporters, consumption of large quantities of meat, beer, and vodka, offset by very healthy vegetarian food graciously donated by Nominjin's restaurant, a school concert, lots of dust, dry air, under-heated rooms, over-heated rooms, long walks in search for restaurants in subfreezing temperatures, witnessing almost daily alcohol-fueled altercations in front of the hotel, crossing of very busy streets with no traffic signals, a regrettable failure on my part of the imbibing of fermented mare's milk that will undoubtably be rectified presently.  Wish you were here! Miki and Tserendorj in rehearsal

Tetsuro in rehearsal at Khan Bank Theater

kids playing a ring toss game in Suhbaatar Square

Mongolia Tour Report Day 4

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In the evening we worked through the remaining pieces that we hadn't touched yet.  One was an improvisation I simply called "Shizukesa", a piece that evokes the sound of the wind, the earth, insects, etc.  Another was the Japanese classical piece "Haru No Umi" which Miki suggested we use as a starting off point for improvisation.  After running through it a few times, trying different approaches and moods, Khongorzul declared she liked the piece, that it reminded her of the Gobi desert.  I told her that the name of the piece meant "The Sea at Springtime"and she responded right away that in many ways the desert and the ocean are similar- the way their horizon looks, their endless vastness. I have to say here that my friend Nominjin, an incredibly accomplished singer in her own right, acting as one of our translators did an amazing job communicating in great detail and feeling about the music at hand in two languages.

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The young morin khuur and khoomei master Shinetsog in rehearsal

Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble: October 3, 2009 @ Khan Bank Theatre

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KTE-Group  

KHOOMEI-TAIKO ENSEMBLE Mongolian, Japanese and US artists come together for a fascinating collaboration, highlighting the popular Mongolian art of khoomei (throat singing) with the driving rhythms of Japanese taiko (drums). The Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble features Shinetsog Dorjnyam (khoomei), Shoji Kameda and Tetsuro Naito (taiko), the legendary folk musician Tserendorj Tseyen (magtaal-praise songs, morin khuur - horsehead fiddle, jaw harp), Kaoru Watanabe (fue and Noh Kan-flutes) and Miki Maruta (koto - zither). The program also includes the captivating voice of Mongolia's urtiin duu (long song) vocalist Khongorzul Ganbaatar, a featured artist in Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Project.

The Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble 2009 programs are supported in part, by the Trust for Mutual Understanding, the Asian Cultural Council and the Japan Foundation through the Performing Arts JAPAN program.

Presented by World Music Institute in association with Asia Society.

  TOUR SCHEDULE:

MONGOLIA Saturday, October 3rd, 2009 Khan Bank Theatre 7:00 pm Seoul Street - 25 Ulaan Baatar, Mongolia

Information please call 96 779885 or 99 702593

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WASHINGTON D.C. Friday, October 9, 2009 The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts 6:00pm 2700 F Street, NW Washington, DC 20566

Tickets and Information: 800-444-1324 or 202-467-4600

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NEW YORK Friday, Oct 16 Symphony Space 8:00 pm 2537 Broadway at 95th Street, New York, NY 10025-6990 Tel: 212.864.5400 World Music Institute for Tickets 212 545-7536

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NEW YORK Saturday, October 17, 2009 Charles B. Wang Center Theatre 8:00pm - 10:00pm Stony Brook University Stony Brook, NY

Reserved seating for all VIP ticket holders. Reservations highly recommended. Please reserve your tickets by e-mailing wangcenter@stonybrook.edu or call (631) 632-4400.

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NEW YORK Tuesday , October 20th The Kumble Theater for the Performing Arts at Long Island University's Brooklyn Campus. 10:15AM & 12:15PM 1 University Plaza Brooklyn, NY 11201

Contact Community Works – performances@communityworksnyc.org or (212) 459-1854

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WASHINGTON Friday, October 23 Performing Arts Center of Wenatchee - Stanley Civic Center 7:30 pm 123 N. Wenatchee Avenue, Wenatchee, WA 98807

Phone: 509-663-ARTS(2787) Email: tickets@pacwen.org

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WASHINGTON Sunday, Oct 25 Town Hall Seattle 7:30pm 1119 Eighth Ave. Seattle, WA 98101

Tel:(206) 652-5858

Mongolia Tour Report Day 3

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Yesterday, we had a full day of shooting for National Mongolian Television.  Considering that as an ensemble we only really began to exist the previous day, I think we did a pretty decent job pulling off five pieces (three of them completely unrehearsed).   We were treated to a delicious vegetarian lunch/dinner at our friend Nominjin's restaurant.  After about four hours of shooting, we did a radio interview.  Evening was more rehearsals where the Japanese and American musicians (who I call NihonTai - the Japan team) worked out some of our pieces so the rehearsals with Mongorutai -the Mongolian team- would go smoother.  At night, we went to the Modern Nomad for some Mongolian cuisine.  I had the Nomad's Delight, a combination of pork, beef and horse meat, and washed it down with Chingess beer.  A t-shirt being sold at the restaurant said "MEAT IS FOR MEN, GRASS IS FOR ANIMALS".  My sentiments exactly. Today, we rehearsed at the Ulaanbaatar Music College, where we will performing on thursday.  Huluguu, a local professional percussionist who is helping organize our activities our here, brought his band to perform for us before we started practice today.  This band wrote the soundtrack for an Oscar nominated film, the Weeping Camel.  Each member was a virtuoso of their respective instruments, whether it was Mongolian koto, traditional oboe and saxophone type instruments, a bass morin khuur, percussion and of course throat singing.  It was such an inspiring beginning of the day.

We then rehearsed for another five or so hours.  We refined some songs we'd been working on and worked on some new repertoire.  I have to say here, that Shinetsog, the 25 year old morin khuur and khoomei master is simply fantastic.  We worked on Shoji's piece After Rain, a piece in a five beat rhythm, many long sections and some tricky counting issues.  Shinetsog only had to listen to parts of it once or twice and he just "got" it.  A simply fantastic musician.  We worked on a piece Tsukiyono that I wrote for two fue, again a tricky piece with many odd meters, sudden speed ups and slow downs, odd repeats with lots of improvisation.  Even before he had mastered the form he was playing with great emotion and virtuosity.  Working with him and the other musicians has been a truly humbling experience.

The great ShinetsogHuluguu's band

Mongolia Tour Report

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Sept 25th,  2009 Day 1 Last night, we arrived in Mongolia after a 14 hour plane trip from JFK to Seoul plus another 3 hours to Ulaanbaatar.  We were picked up at the airport by Byamba and Soyol, the children of the great Tserendorj, the venerable praise song singer who will be performing with us.  This morning, I woke and took a walk to Subhaatar Square, a huge open space in the middle of the city with a mammoth statue of Genghis Khan presiding over it.  It was chilly compared to NY- around 50 degrees, but nothing compared to what I was expecting - I saw that a few nights ago it got down to the low 20s.  I saw an elderly man wearing traditional garb sitting at the square with a tray on his lap, selling a telephone.  Not a cell phone, but a white office phone.  Our eyes met briefly and I considered taking a picture but I was still too new to the country to risk incurring the wrath of a telephone peddler.  Fifteen minutes later I saw a woman selling fruit and a couple of office telephones.  I didn't realize it was such a lucrative product.

This afternoon, Tetsuro, Shoji and I attempted to make a stand for one of the drums since we didn't bring enough due to budget and weight restrictions for our luggage.  Lacking the appropriate power tools we started trying to hand screw the thing together but after much sweating and heavy breathing, we had to leave to go to rehearsal. The rehearsal at the Khan Bank Theater was a lively, open exchange with all the musicians offering their ideas and their artistry.  I created an outline for the overall concert and for the structure of the pieces, but I also left wide open spaces for improvisation and interpretation.  Despite it being our first time making music together we were somewhat familiar with each other, greatly thanks to our many skype sessions over the last year or so.  I felt very comfortable working with them and I have to thank my good friend Nominjin for her wonderful translation work. 

We fleshed out two pieces, one a praise song that Tserendorj wrote for the ensemble.  Shoji and Tetsuro created some taiko parts to accompany his chanting and to accompany solos by the other members of the ensemble.  Khongorzul, despite feeling under the weather, sounded absolutely incredible when she sang.  If I had to pick one word to describe her singing I would say "piercing", but I'd have to follow that word with an explanation: by no means is her voice screeching, painful or annoying, but it cuts through the air and hits you directly in the heart.  It is so strong and so pure and so full of soul that it makes you want to smile and weep at the same time.  Am I exaggerating?  I challenge any one out there to listen to her sing in person and tell me then if you think I'm exaggerating...

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NAKANAKA-Kaoru Watanabe and Tamango with friends!

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NAKANAKAKaoru Watanabe and Tamango with friends! Sept 18th, 2009 (fri) 9 pm to 11pm $10 in advance $12 at the door DROM 85 Avenue A New York, NY 10009 http://www.dromnyc.com/

Kaoru Watanabe, NY-based Japanese taiko drum and Japanese flute player with long time collaborator Tamango, tap dancer/singer/percussionist.  Be prepared to witness two extraordinary improvisors capable of creating moments of intense energy and drama, drawing from Japanese drumming and flute traditions, jazz music, Brazilian and various African rhythms and Amazonian Creole culture.    There will also be a performance by some of Kaoru's taiko students in the physically demanding piece Miyake.

The Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble (KTE)-update

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Hello friends, I and my colleagues are in final stages of preparation for the The Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble (KTE), An exciting new project which explores the possibilities of discovering new vital connections between the cultural traditions of Mongolia, Japan and the United States. KTE combines the American tradition for conceptual exploration of cross-cultural synthesis with ancient Mongolian and Japanese folk music traditions, bringing acclaimed musicians together from the three countries for a series of workshops and performances in Mongolia and across the United States. The instruments used by the KTE musicians include the taiko (drum); koto (Japanese zither); shinobue and noh kan (Japanese bamboo flutes); moorin khuur (horsehead fiddle); and Mongolian jaw harp. A wide variety of singing styles are featured in the program including Japanese folk song and Mongolian praise song, long song and khoomei (throat singing), a remarkable technique in which one performer sings two or three distinct pitches simultaneously.

Among the musicians are two former members of the iconic Japanese taiko group Kodo, Tetsuro Naito and Kaoru Watanabe; the long song singer Khongorzul who gained international notoriety while performing with Yo Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble; the venerable Tserendorj, an officially recognized treasured institution in Mongolia with over forty years of experience; Shoji Kameda a regular member of the GRAMMY-nominated band Hiroshima and On Ensemble; Shinetsog a young khoomei master and Miki Maruta, an acclaimed Tokyo-based koto player.

I'll be leaving for Mongolia on the 24th for a couple weeks. We'll be back in the NY area at Symphony Space, Peter Norton Symphony Space, Harlem Stage/Aaron Davis Hall, Kumble Theater for the Performing Arts in New York, The Charles B. Wang Center of SUNY at Stony Brook in Long Island. We'll also be in Washington DC and the Seattle area. Please check out the website for more info! http://khoomtai.blogspot.com/

Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble project

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KHOOMEI-TAIKO ENSEMBLE  Sept/OctoberUlaanbaatar/Washington DC/New York/Stony Brook/Seattle

KTE-Group

I am currently preparing for a concert tour of the Khoomei-Taiko  Ensemble, a new project I'm serving as artistic director for, the  Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble. 

We will begin a short residency in  Ulaanbaatar in late September, followed by performances at the Kennedy  Center in DC, Symphony Space and Aaron Davis Hall in NYC, Stony Brook  University, and Town Hall in Seattle.  This project brings together top musicians from Japan, Mongolia and the US, including the  acclaimed singer Khongorzul (of Yo Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble),  Tetsuro Naito (formerly of Kodo), Shoji Kameda (of On Ensemble) and  others. 

Please check for more details at http://khoomtai.blogspot.com/

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Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble Tour Schedule

Fri, Oct 16 - Symphony Space

8:00 pm

2537 Broadway at 95th Street, New York, NY 10025-6990 Tel: 212.864.5400 World Music Institute for Tickets 212 545-7536

 

Saturday, October 17, 2009 - Charles B. Wang Center Theatre

8:00pm - 10:00pm

Stony Brook University Stony Brook, NY

Reserved seating for all VIP ticket holders. Reservations highly recommended. Please reserve your tickets by e-mailing wangcenter@stonybrook.edu or call (631) 632-4400.

 

Tuesday , October 20th - The Kumble Theater for the Performing Arts at Long Island University's Brooklyn Campus.

10:15AM & 12:15PM

1 University Plaza Brooklyn, NY 11201

Contact Community Works – performances@communityworksnyc.org or (212) 459-1854

 

Friday, October 23 - Performing Arts Center of Wenatchee - Stanley Civic Center

7:30 pm

123 N. Wenatchee Avenue, Wenatchee, WA 98807 Phone: 509-663-ARTS(2787) Email: tickets@pacwen.org

 

Sunday, Oct 25 - Town Hall Seattle

7:30pm

1119 Eighth Ave. Seattle, WA 98101 Tel:(206) 652-5858

Japan Tour Report

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Hello all!  Thanks for visiting my website.  Here is a very belated report of a trip I made to Japan in June.  More updates coming up soon including: Taiko Conference report and word about a new upcoming project Khoomei-Taiko Ensemble, which teams up musicians from Mongolia, Japan and the US. Week One June 1- 7th

Start the week off right with meetings, rehearsals, a couple of shows and a workshop.  The first performance was at a cozy, intimate jazz club called "In F" in Oizumi Gakuen.  This is one of my favorite clubs in Tokyo- the owner Sato san is a true music lover who always matches me up with great musicians.  This set was with the pianist Tsuboguchi and trumpet player Ruike.  Sato san is from Niigata prefecture, the same prefecture I lived for eight years, and has many types of Niigata sake- some of the best in the world.

After that I had a performance at Super Deluxe, a revisiting of a show I did a couple years ago called RESONANCE.  This year's RESONANCE II featured Tatsuya Nakatani (percussion), Tamango (tap), Mio Matsuda (vocals), Yuu Ishizuka (taiko) and Daniel Rosen(ceramics) and two guests artists Junji sama, an eighty four year old Nihon Buyo (classical dance) master  and Artio, a Senegalese drummer/dancer.  It was an incredible evening with some very beautiful moments. Daniel had created a screen of ceramic plates on which he projected video and images throughout the concert.  He set up a camera above his head to shoot his potter's wheel.  On this he placed bits of paper, shaped pieces of clay and splashed paints of various colors- continuously creating and destroying spinning designs and collages.  All of this was projected live onto three different screens throughout the space.  Often times the video was being projected directly on the performers themselves.  There was wide array of combinations between performers- Tamango and Yuu, Tatsuya and myself, trios, quartets as well as full group improvisations.  I really thank SuperDeluxe for having us again, as well as the audience, the many volunteers who helped out and to the audience who continuously supports the arts.

Week Two

Had meetings and dinner with many old friends.  On wednesday, performed in a quartet as part of the Sengawa Jazz Festival with my old friend cellist Sakamoto Hiromichi, the great drummer Yoshigaki Yasuhiro Tamango and myself at the Kickback Cafe.  This was my first time performing with Yoshigaki san - the level of creativity, sensitivity and responsiveness was fantastic.  Tamango and I in our years of playing together had two firsts in a row- a dance duet followed by a fue duet- both in one extended improvisation.  The staff at the Kickback were incredibly accommodating and personable.

We traveled to Kyoto on Saturday and loaded in at the Urban Guild.  I found out later that that this venue was recently converted from a number of small bars into one large room with a small stage, an old out-of-tune upright piano and simple wooden furniture.  This place also houses regional championships of a game where wooden disks are flicked against others to knock them into holes with rules very similar to that of the game marbles.

About an hour before the show started, Daniel encouraged a few of us to go out to the streets and try to lure some last minute audience members.  We went out to the Kamo river and Tamango sat in with a college band jamming to the euphoric college kids dancing around them.  We passed out some fliers but didn't expect too many of these kids to come to our concert.  When we were almost back to the venue however, a young couple came up and thanked Tamango for his dancing.  We got to talking and in the end they not only came to the show, but they sat in the front row and pretty lead the audience with their shouting and hollering .  The energy of the crowd was incredible and this fueled the performers to even greater heights.  By the end of the evening, the audience was on their feet dancing- I'd say quite an accomplishment for an avant-garde, multimedia, multidisciplinary performance art show!

The next day we performed in Osaka in the venue Full Bloom.  This place was more a lounge for dance parties then a music venue so we had to be a little creative with lighting and sound constraints.  Many of Tatsuya's friend and family came to support and one small girl in particular was very endearing.  Not shy at all, she allowed strangers to pick her up and swing her around.  Later she asked to look at the bottom of Tamango's feet, which were blackened from dancing barefoot.  At first she seemed in awe of his great feet- the tools of the artist, capable of creating both thundering stomps and whispered shuffles all in impeccable rhythm- but after a close inspection, she dismissively turned around to her mother and commented dryly that they were dirty.

The next day, I traveled back to Kyoto and did an intimate performance at a quaint restaurant/ cafe called Otoya.  The founder of the Kyoto Taiko Center, Mr. Higashi acted as host and we bantered between the pieces.  At one point, he asked the audience for requests and I tried to respond in kind.  Among the requests were for a song that evokes a bamboo forest (she was an artist who works with bamboo), music from the Tamasaburo/Kodo production of "Amaterasu", "When the Saints Go Marching In"and "Amazing Grace".  It was interesting to me that people requested decidedly western melodies and no Japanese ones.  The people that requested the pieces told me that they were learning those pieces- and not Japanese repertoire- in a fue club where they were learning to play.

The next two weeks entailed my hanging out in Tokyo, taking a lesson and otherwise jamming out with the 15th generation Noh Kan player Isso Yukihiro for about 8 hours at his house, hanging out with the great fue maker Ranjo at his studio in Chiba prefecture, meeting up with friends and relatives, including the acclaimed calligrapher Kakinuma Koji and the taiko maker Yoshi Miyamoto.  I was able to see some Noh, a taiko/beatbox/jazz piano show, and performed a final time at In F with the great violinist/vocalist Ota Keisuke and the drummer Masanori Amakura.  Besides these two wonderful musicians, many guests joined in on two, three or four songs each:  the shamisen player Tanaka Yumiko, the bassists Shanir Blumntkrantz, Todd Nichols and Sugawa Takashi, the dancer Mami Nakase and last but not least the Noh Kan player Isso Yukihiro.  The music went from heavy to playful, absurd to sentimental.  With so many great musicians contributing their art, the room was full of laughter and good feelings.  I had a really great time and have so much love and appreciation for the musicians , the audience and especially the owner of In F, Sato san.

I returned to NY the next day, the 26th of June.

Workshop@North American Taiko Conference(Aug.7,8)

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August 7, 8Kaoru will be teaching a couple of workshops at the North American Taiko Conference, sitting in on a panel discussion as well as performing with On Ensemble at the Taiko Jam 09 concert. 

Workshop #12 Fue Fundamentals Kaoru Watanabe Friday, Aug. 7 @ 1:30 PM

Due to Kaoru’s range and wealth of knowledge accumulated after decades of intense study and performance, even seasoned players may gain insight about this incredibly versatile instrument through this fundamentals class. The workshop will begin with a brief overview of different types of fue, their construction and distinct playing styles. Kaoru will then go over basic hand position, breathing, tone production, fingering exercises and some simple melodies. Participants should bring a #8 or #6 fue if possible. Fue will also be available for sale

Workshop #47 Yoko Uchi Fundamentals Kaoru Watanabe Saturday, Aug. 8 @ 9:00 AM

Based on his experience in intensive study and performance with Kodo, including as a soloist in their signature piece Miyake, Kaoru will breakdown yoko uchi (sideways stance playing) in a way that allows the taiko player to better utilize the natural tensions and power inherent in the body through a better understanding of often cited but elusive concepts of relaxation, finding “the center,” and lower body strength, flexibility, and being more grounded. Reexamine the function and movement of each body part, the hand, the wrist, the elbow, the shoulder, and most importantly the back, hips and legs, in a clear and concise way.

Please check here for details: http://www.taikoconference.org/

NakaNaka Ukiyo-jazz!!(Jul.31)

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Thanks to all of you who came to my Rubin show as well as the Taiko Center's Happyoukai event.  It was great to see all you out there.  
Although I won't be there, I have curated the latest installment of NakaNaka for next FRIDAY the 31st.  Two sets of really great jazz/improvisational music.  The leaders of both groups have been profoundly influenced by Japanese culture and their music truly embodies the celebratory spirit of NakaNaka. 
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KATARU@Rubin Museum(Jul.17)

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July 17, 2009 KATARU@Rubin Museum Kaoru Watanabe/ Tatsuya Nakatani / Adam Rudolph

KATARU meaning "to speak" in Japanese is a trio made up of Kaoru Watanabe on Japanese and Western flutes and taiko drums, Adam Rudolph on Handrumset and percussion and Tatsuya Nakatani on modified drumset , bowed gongs and percussion - three musicians of disparate musical backgrounds who, by seamlessly integrating abstracted Japanese Noh, Gagaku, festival and folk music components with traditional global percussion, free jazz and noise elements create ever shifting emotional soundscapes.  The spontaneity, delicacy and visceral intensity of the trio seeks to reflect, in a contemporary aesthetic, an ancient prototypical human expression.

Friday July 17, 2009 @ 7:00 PM $18.00 in advance / $20.00 day of Member Price: $16.20

Rubin Museum of Art 150 West 17th Street New York, NY 10011 212.620.5000 http://www.rmanyc.org/pages/load/32

Kaoru Watanabe Taiko Center -The Village @ Gureje(Jul.19)

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July 19, 2009 Kaoru Watanabe Taiko Center -The Village @ Gureje

HAPPYOKAI - Come join us for a celebration of Japanese taiko drumming and flute (fue), music, food, drinks, and special guest performances. Meet the students and friends of the Taiko Center and find out what's mesmerizing about Taiko.

Performances by:  Kaoru Watanabe & students Guest Appearance by: Eric Person (MOON POOL) More Guest appearances and performances to be announced

Time: 4pm Place: The Village@Gureje 886 Pacific St., Bklyn 11238 New York, NY 718 857-2522 / 718 857-2105 Google Map Direction

Suggested Admission: $10 Raffles, Good food, and Drinks plus lots of Fun! More info: http://www.gureje.com/ or 718 857 2522