FALL
2007 HONORS COURSES
HONR 268Y Japan’s Silk Road Music:
Treasured, Transformed, and Transcendent
Wednesday, 6:30-9:00 p.m.
Dr. Miyuki Yoshikami, Lecturer in University Honors
Japan is a rich source of world music. Lured by silk
and exotic goods, ancient merchants traveled the perilous Silk Road
from the Roman Empire, Persia, Manchuria, India, and Southeast Asia
to converge in Chang’an, China. The trade route then continued eastward
to Korea and Japan, where a storehouse in Nara today houses priceless
possessions given to the Emperor Shomu (724-749). Less concrete, but
very significant, are the introduction of Buddhist chants, gagaku and
bugaku ensemble music that are treasured and played as originally composed
in Japan; the music continues to be heard today like a living record
of ancient sounds. Later during the 9th century, political conditions
made traveling unsafe. Indigenous Japanese aesthetics prevailed upon
Silk Road instruments to transform them into the refined genres of biwa,
noh chants, koto, and later shamisen music of bunraku and kabuki theater.
Upon these highly developed musical forms, Western music, introduced
in the late 19th century, initiated experimentations to transcend Japanese
music into new fusions. These novel creations, in a turnabout, now radiate
back to parts of Asia and the West.
The course examines historically the introduction, adaptation,
preservation, new creations, and the current melding of Japanese with
Western music that now go beyond its borders. Students will listen to
and recognize the major genres of music, research and discuss the content
and society of the music, and analyze the changes. Course readings will
consist of selected handouts, video and listening assignments, Internet
explorations, and demonstrations by performers.
CORE–History or Theory of the Arts [HA] Diversity [D]