Yuki
雪
[Genres] | Jiuta |
[Stil] | Hauta |
[Schule] | Ikuta Ryû - 生田 |
[Komponiert] | Minezaki Kōtō - Shamisen |
Geschichte (Tsuge Gen'ichi):
Yuki ('Snow') is one of the best-known jiuta pieces. The song text refers to the serene mind of a nun who has lived apart from the world ever since the time she was disappointed in love while she was a geisha girl. The instrumental interlude (ainote); which is actually meant to evoke the tolling of a distant temple bell on a snowy night, has become so popular that the melancholic melody is often used as a kind of 'leitmotiv' to describe a snowy scene, or to evoke a cold, dark atmosphere. |
Gedicht (Übersetzt von Tsuge Gen'ichi)
When I brush away The flowers, and the snow- How clear my sleeves become! Truly it was an affair Of long, long ago. The man I waited for May still be waiting for me. The cry of the mandarin duck Calling for his mate From his freezing nest Makes me feel sorrowful. The temple bell at midnight Wakes me From my lonely reverie. It makes me sad to hear That distant temple bell. When the patter of hail Reaches my pillow, I seem to hear, somehow, His knocking on my door again. And less and less am I able To dam up my tears. Freezing now Into icicles. I no longer care about This hard, bitter life. I'm only sorry that I still can't think of My former lover as sinful. Ah, the discarded sorrows! The forsaken world of sorrow! | Hana mo yuki mo haraeba kiyoki tamoto kana Honni mukashi no mukashi no koto yo waga matsu hito mo ware wo machiken (ai) Oshi no otori ni mono omoiba no kooru fusuma ni naku ne wa sazona sanaki dani kokoro mo tooki yowa no kane (ainote) Kiku mo samishiki hitorine no makura ni hibiku arare no oto mo moshiya to isso sekikanete otsuru namida no tsurara yori tsuraki inochi wa oshikaranedomo koishiki hito wa tsumi fukaku (ai) omowanu koto no kanashisa ni suteta uki (ai) suteta ukiyo no yamakazura |
Yuki spielt auf den folgenden Alben
Album | Künstler | |
Abe Keiko Record Set - 02 |
Stimme : Abe Keiko Shamisen : Fujii Kunie | |
Araki Kodo III and Fukuda Eika - Collection of Famous Performances - 02 |
Stimme : Fukuda Eika Shamisen : Fukuda Eika Shakuhachi : Araki Kodō III | |
Fujii Kunie, The World of Shamisen and Jiuta Singing 1 |
Stimme : Fujii Kunie Shamisen : Fujii Kunie | |
Fukami Satomi - Sokyoku Jiuta Shu - 3 |
Stimme : Fukami Satomi Shamisen : Fukami Satomi | |
Ginyu |
Shakuhachi : Gunnar Jinmei Linder | |
Hirai Sumiko no Sekai |
Stimme : Hirai Sumiko Shamisen : Hirai Sumiko | |
Jiuta no Sekai - 4 |
Stimme : Tomiyama Seikin I Shamisen : Tomiyama Seikin I | |
Kikuhara Hatsuko Zenshu vol. 15 |
Stimme : Kikuhara Hatsuko Shamisen : Kikuhara Hatsuko Koto : Hagiwara Seigin Shakuhachi : Hoshida Ichizan I | |
Koto uta |
Stimme : Iseki Kazehiro Shamisen : Iseki Kazehiro | |
Musical Anthology of the Orient, Unesco Collection Vol 3 |
Stimme : Tomiyama Seikin I Koto : Tomiyama Seikin I | |
Ji-uta is the general term for songs or song-cycles accompanied on the shamisen which have no connection with the theatre. The meaning of the word Ji-uta (local songs) refers to their place of origin and main circulation, i.e. the Kyoto-Osaka district. The Ji-uta category includes the following forms: cycles made up of several short songs, extended songs with one continuous text, pieces in which the text occupies first place in importance, and those in which virtuosic instrumental interludes (tegoto) occur. "Yuki" (the word means snow) belongs to the group in which the emphasis is placed on the text. It was written by Minezaki Kengyo, a leading composer of the flourishing Tegotomono (tegoto pieces) School towards the end of the 18th century. Thus two shamisen soli are also found in "Yuki"; the initial motive of the second of these was used in the Edo period to portray the coldness of winter and snowfall, and was quoted in many other pieces to represent the mood of winter. The subject-matter is taken from the world of the courtesans. Soseki, a well-known Geisha, has resolved to renounce the world and become a nun. But her thoughts keep on returning to her former lover. These moments of tension provide the setting for the piece. The shamisen is tuned in Honchoshi. | ||
Sankyoku Gassō Dai Zenshū vol. 19 (三曲合奏大全集19) |
Shakuhachi : Hoshida Ichizan II Shamisen : Tomizaki Shunkin Koto : Tominaka Fumikazu Stimme : Tomizaki Fumiyo | |
Sasagawa Shizue no Shigei Vol. 6 |
Shakuhachi : Wada Shingetsu Shamisen : Sasagawa Shizue | |
Shakuhachi Tokusen - Araki Kodo III |
Stimme : Fukuda Eika Shamisen : Fukuda Eika Shakuhachi : Araki Kodō III | |
Shamisen II | ||
Sō no Shiori (Ikuta Ryū) vol 5 |
Stimme : Kikuhara Hatsuko Shamisen : Kikuhara Hatsuko | |
Sokyoku Jiuta Taikei 15 |
Stimme : Fukuda Eika Shamisen : Fukuda Eika Shakuhachi : Araki Kodō III | |
Togashi Noriko - 03 |
Shamisen : Togashi Noriko | |
Tomiyama Kiyotaka's World |
Stimme : Tomiyama Seikin II Shamisen : Tomiyama Seikin II | |
Snow Yuki is one of the most popular jiuta pieces. It was composed by Minezaki Koto, who was active in Osaka at the end of the 18th century. The song text depicts the tranquil mind of a nun and her sad psyche before becoming a nun. The interlude is widely considered to represent the sound of a temple bell on a snowy night. However, its melody is frequently utilized to refer to snow in the theatrical contexts of kabuki and bunraku. |