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Tōyō Ongaku

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Tōyō Ongaku
NameTōyō Ongaku
Native name東洋音楽
Stylistic originsGagaku, Shōmyō, Noh, Kabuki, Chinese music, Korean court music
Cultural originsAsuka period, Nara period, Heian period
InstrumentsKoto, Shō, Biwa, Taiko, Fue
Notable figuresPrince Shōtoku, Sugawara no Michizane, Fujiwara no Michinaga, Ono no Takamura, Ennin
SubgenresGagaku, Shōmyō, Noh music

Tōyō Ongaku is a historical and scholarly term used to describe a broad body of musical practices, repertoires, and theoretical approaches associated with East Asian traditions that were assimilated, adapted, and developed within the Japanese archipelago from antiquity through the premodern period. It encompasses courtly, ritual, theatrical, and instrumental repertories and intersects with major cultural institutions of Nara period, Heian period, and later eras, influencing figures, schools, and transmission routes across China, Korea, and Ryukyu Kingdom.

Etymology and Definition

The compound term draws on classical Sino-Japanese lexical items attested in sources such as the Man'yōshū, Nihon Shoki, and Shoku Nihongi, paralleling terminology found in Tang dynasty and Song dynasty musical treatises; scholars compare it with entries in the Yuefu corpus and the Book of Rites. In philological discussions, commentators reference terminological parallels involving Ritsuryō codes, the writings of Sugawara no Michizane, and medieval commentaries associated with the Esoteric Buddhism transmission via monks like Kūkai and Saichō.

Historical Development

Early transmission routes are traced to diplomatic and tributary contacts with Sui dynasty, Tang dynasty, and Three Kingdoms of Korea polities, and through envoys such as those recorded in the Kentōshi missions and monk-travelers like Ennin and Eison. Court institutionalization of repertories occurred under the auspices of the Dajōkan and later the Daijō-daijin-era administration, while patronage by aristocrats including members of the Fujiwara clan and monastic centers like Tōdai-ji and Kōfuku-ji shaped repertory formation. The medieval period saw adaptations within the Kamakura shogunate and innovations associated with theatrical forms patronized by figures like Zeami Motokiyo and venues tied to the Muromachi period and Azuchi–Momoyama period transformations.

Musical Characteristics and Styles

Stylistic analysis situates Tōyō Ongaku repertories within modal, heterophonic, and heterometric frameworks discussed alongside Gagaku tonality, Shōmyō chant modes, and rhythmic practices found in Noh music and Kabuki. Instrumental textures often foreground wind and plucked idiophones exemplified by the Shō, Koto, Biwa, and Fue, supported by percussion lineages from Taiko traditions. Repertoires exhibit melodic formulas comparable to Tangban melodic types, scale structures echoed in Chinese scale system descriptions, and performative conventions referenced in sources attributed to Fujiwara no Kiyosuke and Tachibana no Moroe.

Key Composers and Works

Canonical attributions include court compilations and named composers preserved in imperial archives such as those tied to Empress Kōmyō, Emperor Kanmu, and later patrons like Ashikaga Yoshimitsu. Specific works appear in collections related to Gagaku repertoire lists, ritual chant corpora linked to Shōmyō anthologies, and theatrical scores preserved via families like the Tōsha and Nōgaku schools. Scholarship frequently cross-references manuscripts in repositories associated with Todai-ji Library, Kamakura period temple collections, and private archives of the Ichikawa family and Tatekawa school.

Cultural Influence and Reception

Tōyō Ongaku shaped aesthetic discourse among poets and courtiers represented by Ki no Tsurayuki, Ono no Takamura, and Murasaki Shikibu, while influencing ritual praxis at institutions like Ise Grand Shrine and Kumano Sanzan. Its reception in the Edo period intersected with urban popular culture surrounding Kabuki and Bunraku, and in the Meiji Restoration debates it formed a comparative reference point in musicological exchanges involving Fukuzawa Yukichi and educators at the Tokyo University of the Arts. Intellectual engagement continued through the 20th century in scholarship by figures connected to Tokyo National Museum, Kyoto University, and international comparative studies with scholars from Peking University, Seoul National University, and SOAS University of London.

Preservation and Modern Revivals

Preservation efforts rely on institutional custodians such as Imperial Household Agency archives, temple libraries like Kōfuku-ji and Enryaku-ji, and performing lineages maintained by schools including Koto-ryū and Nohgaku Kanze school. Modern revivals and reconstructions engage ethnomusicologists and performers affiliated with NHK Symphony Orchestra projects, university departments at Tokyo University of the Arts and Kyoto Prefectural University of Arts, and international early music ensembles collaborating with researchers from Smithsonian Institution and British Museum. Recent initiatives feature digitization programs coordinated with National Diet Library, cross-cultural residencies with ensembles from Beijing Modern Music Festival and National Gugak Center, and festival presentations at venues such as Suntory Hall and Festival Hall.

Category:Japanese music Category:East Asian music