Date:
Wednesday, September 9, 2015 - 20:00 to 21:45
Room:
Large Classroom
Student should bring:
Nagado Bachi
Ear Plugs
Class syllabus:
Aisatsu
Stretches
4-8-16-32
Play as warm-up
Focus on timing and listening to play together
Lec/Demo Leader: Nozomi
- Warm-up used to practice form/kata and timing
- Each pattern practices certain techniques:
- 4 - relaxed strike focused on efficiently (elbow first!) building speed toward the drum one arm at a time
- 8 - As above, but arms move simultaneously
- 16 - same technique concept, but elbows only
- 32 - as above, wrists only
- Arrangement: Play through three times
Renshuu
Practice playing two- and one-beat offsets
Practice playing with swing jiuchi
Lec/Demo Leader: Wendy
- Practice piece composed by Seiichi Tanaka of San Francisco Taiko Dojo (est. 1968)
- Renshuu means "practice" in Japanese
- Each line contains one or more of the most basic sounds that a player should learn to play taiko music
- There are five total patterns and each is repeated once
- Arrangement: play in straight, play in swing, end with oroshi!
- Video here: Renshuu Taiko
Don tsuku DoRo tsuku
Play both unison and offset versions
- Offset version is in two groups and offset by 1/2 beat
Lec/Demo Leader: Mike
- Drill used to practice dynamics (loud vs. soft) and bachi control
- Name of the drill is the kuchishoga for the main pattern
- Kuchishoga is how we learn taiko pieces, for example...:
- Don - one loud hit in the center
- Doko/dogo/doro - two loud hits in the center
- tsuku - two quiet hits in the center
- kara - two hits on the rim
- Have someone demonstrate each of the above as you explain
- Arrangement: twice unison, twice offset (regular group ends on next downbeat to join the offset group)
Oroshi
Practice ending our Renshuu arrangement with Oroshi after pattern E
Lec/Demo Leader: Evelyn
- The word oroshi is commonly used to refer to making something smaller
- In taiko, we take the space between our hits, which starts off very large, and gradually make it smaller until...
- ...we're playing as fast as we can and we choose how we want to end our oroshi
- Here, you could say something like, "Listen for oroshi at the end of our Renshuu arrangement!"
- Arrangement: use to end Renshuu!
Clean
Aisatsu
Teacher(s):
Yuta Kato
Attendance:
Michael Yamanaka
Nozomi Okabe
Evelyn Wu
Grace Miyake
Wendy Ito