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Tsuru Kame no Kyoku

鶴亀の曲

[Genre]Sokyoku
[Style]Meiji Shinkyoku
[School]Ikuta Ryû - 生田
[Composed]Matuzaka Kengyo - Koto
Tateyama Noboru - Shamisen

Tsuru Kame no Kyoku appears on the following albums

Album Artist

Sō no Shiori (Ikuta Ryū) vol 3 Voice : Kikuhara Hatsuko
Shamisen : Kikuhara Hatsuko
Koto : Fujii Kunie

Sokyoku Jiuta Taikei 44 Koto : Fujii Sagariminkou II
Shakuhachi : Shimabara Hanzan
Voice : Kusuda Norifumi
Koto : Kusuda Norifumi

Venerated Patterns
(The Crane and the Tortoise) Di and Shamisen
The Nagauta piece Tsurukame (1851) celebrates imperial longevity (the crane and tortoise are symbols of long life) and like many other Nagauta pieces (e.g., Kokaji, Musume Dojoji), it is derived from a play from the Noh theater, the aristocratic drama form which originated and developed during the Muromachi period (13381573). In its entirety, Tsurukame is comprised of eight movements which can be grouped into three major sections corresponding to the jo-ha-kyu (introduction-exposition-denouement) structure found throughout the performing arts of Japan. The Di (playing the vocal line) is accompanied by the Shamisen (in honchoshi tuning) and performed here is the opening movement, a movement from the exposition section (an instrumental duet), and the concluding movement.