
The Yoshida Brothers play the traditional 3-stringed instrument the shamisen. Noriko said that young people in Japan are more interested in Western music and culture and not traditional Japanese music. But the Yoshida Brothers have managed to cross over to popular culture on the back of a beer commercial.
Noriko first showed a video of the brothers doing a traditional shamisen performance. I like it, though am not sure I could take more than 3 minutes of it... (By the way, Noriko says the guy with blond hair that the camera keeps cutting to is a famous Japanese singer.)
Next she showed a video which has the brothers playing a more modern version of the traditional music (the video is a generic "tour of japan").
Noriko is glad that a band like the Yoshida Brothers can get young people interested in traditional music, too. She said she herself listens to more Western music and when I asked her why she chose to play this for the class she said she wanted to show Japanese culture.
I asked if she has Yoshida Brothers albums which led to a discussion about how people buy and/or acquire music. She said that most young people in Japan do not buy whole albums anymore: they just download the songs they are interested in. The students from other countries concurred that this is behavior is true in their countries, too.



Not sure what we will listen to next week. Edgar from Russia doesn't like any of the stuff we've played so far, so I am trying to get him to bring something in that he likes.
2 comments:
not the ukraine but ukraine! that were old times
i like the class you've arranged for those international students!!! im one of them!
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