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Japanese guiter

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Uploaded by on Aug 16, 2008

Shamisen Description
The jamisen is the Chinese instrument equivalent to the samisen. Front and back covered in snake-skin, with oval block of hard wood body, measuring 6 inches in length 5 in breadth, and 3 セ in thickness, 2 inch holes in diameter are cut. 3 strings pass from the tuning pegs though a small ivory notch on the neck, and over a small ivory bridge on the face, fastened to an ivory knob at the base of belly; jamisen played with small tortoise-shell plectrum, long silk cord and tassel attached. Neck is 2 inches shorter than samisen, pegs are larger. Strings tuned to Honchoshi.

The shamisen is one of Japan's most popular classical musical instruments. Another Chinese import, it came to Japan by way of Okinawa in the middle of the sixteenth-century. The shamisen arrived to Japan through Liu Chiu in 1560. There are three tunings, adopted to Hirajoshi; Honchoshi, Ni-agari, San-sagari The word 'agari' means raising, 'sagari' is lowering, 'choshi' is normal, 'joshi' is tuning, ni-agari is second string raised, san-sagari is third string lowered. The shamisen resembles the banjo, it has a long, thick neck and a small, rectangular body covered with skin. The instrument is made of four boards of Chinese quinced or oak, through which a stick made of red sandalwood or Indian redwood is inserted. The skin covering both sides of the body is usually cat skin, but dog skin is used as well. Three strings of different thicknesses are plucked and the pitch is adjusted using the tuning pegs on the head, just like a guitar or violin. The strings are not plucked with the fingers, a large triangular plectrum is used to strike the strings. Generally the plectrum is made of ivory or tortoise shell, and in the shape of a Ginko tree leaf. The shamisen is frequently used as an accompaniment to songs of various types.

Kabuki theater is a musical theater; it is filled with dance, instrumental music and percussion. There are two instrumental performance groups on the kabuki stage. To the left of the stage is a small room with a narrow window (kuromisu); inside this room sit the geza, or "background music" players. But on the right side of the stage is a raised platform, the choba yuka on which the narrator (tayu) and the onstage music ensemble (debayashi). This ensemble consisted of singers, hand drums (ko tsuzumi and o tsuzumi), a stick drum (taiko), a Noh flute (nokan) or bamboo flute (takebue, and the principle instrument, the shamisen. On-stage shamisen music became a constant feature of the kabuki stage from the middle of the seventeenth century.

America's first performance was extremely successful.
The performance is Hiromitsu Agatsuma

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  • Check your spelling please... kthx

  • Wow this guys is rock man. Cool...

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  • Respond to this video...  of course they do, they're musical instruments. i "play" mandolin and banjo and am building my own shamisen from bubinga. i can get a decent import or cheap but well made american mandolin (howard morris or breedlove) for 500 to a thousand dollars if i look hard enough. if i want a gilchrist or nugget, though...i'm looking at 10-30000. if you're starting out, you can find a decent instrument (shamisen) at kotosandmore for about 1500 bucks.

  • @siklopz They get MUCH more expensive than that....

  • Very cool music, you get the Rockstaar praise 5 stars

  • My dream is to play the steptoe and son theme on one of these one day.

  • awesome i like it

  • I think I'm in love with those guitary thingys!! :D

  • @mrkillswitch17 They run about 1500 to a thousand in american dollars.  use a currency calculator to extrapolate yen cost.

  • how much would a shamisen cost in both yen and american money?

  • actually its called a shamisen.

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