Wow, David!

   Koto, shamisen, and sho!?

   I've had similar, though more rehearsed, experiences, both with
   sankyoku and shakuhachi ensemble.  The Japanese do seem to have an
   entirely different approach to rehearsal, at least in traditional
   music.    In my experience, nobody stops and says, "can we go over that
   part again?" either.  They just plough through, and you keep up as you
   can.  As I recall, too, 3 and 4 dan really move!  I wonder if it's
   different with European music in Japan.

   Best to all, and keep playing,

   Chris.
   >>> David van Ooijen <[email protected]> 12/6/2010 5:31 PM >>>
   On 6 December 2010 23:05,  <[email protected]> wrote:
   > Movement of the musician(s) is one thing for solo music, another for
   > ensemble music.
   Slightly off-topic, but I cannot resist my experience of playing
   sankyoku (music for an ensemble of three people) in Japan many years
   ago. The Japanese are not known for their grand gestures, expressive
   facial expressions or theatricals in everyday life. But what I
   experienced on stage went far beyond this
   For a public concert I was coupled to a koto and a sho player, both
   very, very high professionals. I was playing shamisen and a beginner
   on the instrument. We played Rokudan, _the_ classic instrumental
   instrumental piece of the danmono repertoire. There was no time for
   rehearsal, other pieces in other combinations of players (there were
   more musicians, also amateurs, and I was playing lute and guitar as
   well; a busy show for me) were more in need of rehearsing, and we were
   all pros anyway, so we'd manage. But did I get a shock! On stage my
   fellow musicians bowed to the audience, picked up their instruments
   and started. No cues, no gestures, no nothing. I played along,
   parallel seconds in the first measures! I must be wrong, I was
   thinking, but jumping ahead or backwards might make things worse, they
   are the real pros here, so I'll let them fix it. It needn't be fixed,
   the score had parallel seconds (I had not seen a score, just my part,
   and not heard the piece in this combination before). The gradual
   accellerandi and subtle microtonal changes in pitch were all done
   without visible cues. I felt so alone. But I also realised that I
   could actually play along; I survived. This experience has opened my
   ears in a way I had not experienced before. Ever since I need to rely
   so much less on visual clues from my fellow musicians.
   my two yen
   David
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   David van Ooijen
   [email protected]
   www.davidvanooijen.nl
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References

   1. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute

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