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      KO-UTA

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      Little Songs of the Geisha World

       by Liza Crihfield

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      CHARLES E. TUTTLE COMPANY

      Rutland, Vermont & Tokyo, Japan

      REPRESENTATIVES

      For Continental Europe:

      BOXERBOOKS, INC., Zurich

      For the British Isles:

      PRENTICE-HALL INTERNATIONAL, INC., London

      For Australasia:

      BOOK WISE (AUSTRALIA) PTY. LTD.

      104-108 Sussex Street, Sydney 2000

      Published by the Charles E. Tuttle Company, Inc. of Rutland, Vermont Tokyo, Japan with editorial offices at Osaki Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 141-0032.

      Copyright in Japan, 1979

       by Charles E. Tuttle Co., Inc.

      All rights reserved

      Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 78-66085

       International Standard Book No. 0-8048 1292-6

       ISBN 978-1-4629-1810-2 (ebook)

      First printing, 1979

       Printed in Japan

      To Hasui Kiyo

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

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       Introduction

       The Ko-uta

       1. First Day of Spring—Haru kaze ga soyo soyo to

       2. A Single Plum Blossom—Ume ichirin

       3. Two Fans—Kasane-ōgi

       4. Evening Rain—Koyoi wa ame

       5. Waiting Anxiously—Machiwabite

       6. I’m Leaving—Tomete mo kaeru

       7. Just Down the Road—Kono saki ni

       8. In the Right Now of Now—Ima no ima

       9. White Fans—Hakusen

       10. After the Rain—Yūdachi no sugite

       11. Sound of Insects—Mushi no ne

       12. The Seven Autumn Grasses—Aki no nanakusa

       13. Sprinkling the Garden—Uchimizu

       14. Hoodwinked—Damasarete

       15. First Snow—Hatsuyuki

       16. The Snow Man—Yuki no daruma

       17. The Charm of Tatsumi—Tatsumya yoi toko

       18. Cold Water Tea—Mizu no debana

       19. Lovers’ Quarrel—Hara no tatsu tokya

       20. Longing—Sekare sekarete

       21. Journeying Lovestruck—Horete kayou ni

       22. Closing Time Is Midnight—Hike wa kokonotsu

       23. Wine and Women—Sake to onna

       24. Marionette—Karakuri

       25. Snake Mountain—Hebi yama

       Appendixes :

       1. Shamisen Notation for Tomete mo Kaeru

       2. Western Transcription of Tomete mo Kaeru

      INTRODUCTION

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      AS A GENRE of music, the ko-uta is best described by a direct translation of the word—literally, “little song.” Most ko-uta may be sung in less than a minute, longer ones taking perhaps three or four at most. They are accompanied by the shamisen—a fretless, three-stringed, long-necked, “banjo-like” instrument. The difficulty in singing ko-uta lies in the fact that voice and instrument take two separate threads of sound and interval, weaving them together like a duet. The shamisen gives the initial note of a phrase, leading the singer, and after that it is the complicated timing and skillful juxtaposition of shamisen and voice which is appreciated.

      It is difficult to convey the musical aspect on the written page, but the aim of this sampling from the ko-uta repertoire is to introduce in a small way the fascinating diversity of these songs. Ranging from the most refined aestheticism to earthy humor, ko-uta have been created from many sources. Like haiku, they are an extremely short medium of expression; thus, their essence is pithiness. They must make their point in few words, so they tend to be “dense” in the sense that many images may be evoked with a few well-chosen phrases.

      Ko-uta come to life when they are sung, and the best example of where they live is in the geisha world. Most geisha study and perform ko-uta, and many of the songs concern male-female relations in the pleasure quarters.

      Unlike haiku and the other forms of Japanese poetry thus far introduced to the West that come from the aristocratic world or from the “wandering monk” tradition, ko-uta belong to the hardworking, hard-playing merchant class of the late Edo period (mainly 19th century). The rise of the geisha coincided with the rise in prosperity of this class, and ko-uta express the sentiments of sophisticated Edo (now Tokyo) city dwellers at play.

      One

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