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CJS Special Event: Special Shomyo and Shirabyoshi Performance

Friday, September 19, 2014
12:00 AM
Helmut Stern Auditorium (University of Michigan Museum of Art, 525 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109)

Bio:

Makiko Sakurai

Songwriter/Vocalist (Tendai Ohara Chant)/Performer (Shirabyoshi Dance)

Makiko Sakurai has studied the Tendai Ohara style of shomyo with Genshin Nakayama since 1989. She received her undergraduate degree from Osaka University of the Arts in piano performance and a master’s degree in composition from Tokyo College of Music. In 1994 she received a scholarship from the Asian Culture Council to study the Navajo language and the music of the Navajo and the Hopi in Arizona. Following this study, she returned to the performance of Heian period chant and shirabyoshi dance in its unaccompanied form. Ms. Sakurai has adapted shomyo for contemporary settings, collaborated with Japanese and American composers, and written several original noh dramas, including Manhattan Okina (first performed 2007), Pirate Princess (2009), and Minister of the Bank (2014).

Abstract:

Shomyo is a chant used in Japanese esoteric Buddhist services, Tendai shomyo (shomyo in the Tendai sect) was brought to Japan from China by the monk Ennin (794-864). Initially, during the Heian period (8th-12th centuries CE), the monks chanted the poetic parts of sutra text in Chinese or Sanskrit. Later, monks began to chant the translated Japanese text. A Buddhist service conducted in translated Japanese is called renji, and the part of renji that is sung is called shirabyoshi. Later the word shirabyoshi came to refer also to female performers who sung Buddhist and Chinese literary texts. These performers also danced. 

At this special event, Ms. Sakurai will perform 5 pieces of shomyo and 3 pieces of shirabyoshi. A Q&A session will follow the performance.

Cosponsored by the Center for World Performance Studies, the Confucius Institute at the University of Michigan, the Department of Musicology, and the Kenneth G. Lieberthal and Richard H. Rogel Center for Chinese Studies.

Speaker: