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Eien Hunter-Ishikawa - Edo Kotobuki Jishi Demonstration and Workshop

  • Kaoru Watanabe Taiko Center 950 St Johns Pl Brooklyn, NY, 11213 (map)

Edo Kotobuki Jishi

Commonly translated as "lion dance," the shishi mai of Edo (the old name for Tokyo) consists of one person as the shishi and three accompanying musicians playing taiko, atarigane, and shinobue. Shishi mai performances are thought to bring good fortune and can often be seen at celebratory occasions. The version taught will be in the style of Wakayama Shachu.

This workshop includes the demonstration performance!

Fee: $70
Please email info@taikonyc.com to sign up!

He is available for private lessons on April 6th, Thursday. If you are interested, please email info@taikonyc.com

Eien Hunter-Ishikawa is a musician and educator based in Portland, Oregon specializing in drumset, taiko, percussion, and shinobue.  Born in Japan, his passion for drumming started at an early age through the involvement of a youth taiko ensemble directed by Saburo Mochizuki, a founding member of Tokyo’s pioneering taiko ensemble Sukeroku Daiko.  He earned his Bachelor of Music Education at Central Michigan University, where he performed, recorded, and toured as a member of the Robert Hohner Percussion Ensemble under the direction of the late Robert Hohner, and earned his Master of Music at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.  During his time in Honolulu, Eien performed and toured extensively as a member of the Kenny Endo Taiko Ensemble throughout the United States and Europe and taught classes at the Taiko Center of the Pacific, a school of traditional and contemporary taiko.  He continues his studies of the traditional Japanese music forms Edo Bayashi (festival music of old Tokyo) and Edo Kotobuki Jishi (lion dance of old Tokyo) through master musician and dancer Kyosuke Suzuki.

Eien has appeared as guest artist in a variety of concerts including John Kaizan Neptune, Kenny Endo Ensemble, TaikoArts Midwest, and Makoto Taiko. He collaborated with shakuhachi artist Alcvin Ryuzen Ramos to present category-defying music with his ensemble Maru.  He has worked with electro-acoustic groups Isshin Denshin Atmospheric Ensemble and Haagen & Ryuzen, TomoeArts artistic director Colleen Lanki, Vancouver Intercultural Orchestra, tsugaru shamisen artist Hiroshi Yamaguchi, sho artist Naomi Sato, Michael O'Neill's bagpipe ensemble Mearingstone, Vancouverʼs Silk Road Music, African band Kow Kanda, and rock/reggae band Still Creek.  He performs traditional Japanese music and jazz with his vibraphone & shakuhachi duet with Bruce Huebner.  Eien is a member of contemporary taiko quartet On Ensemble and continues to write new compositions for the group.

Eien has performed at the North American Taiko Conference, Chico World Music Festival, Vancouver’s Powell Street Festival, Vancouver International Jazz Festival, Dancing on the Edge Festival, Hawaii International Taiko Festival, Honolulu International Jazz Festival, and the Detroit Montreux Jazz Festival.  A very active instructor of percussion, taiko, and shinobue, he has presented workshops at the North American Taiko Conference, World Taiko Gathering, Taiko Baka Gathering, Fue of the Bay, Pacific Northwest Regional Taiko Gathering, and Asano Taiko US.  Eien continues to work in a wide variety of artistic collaborations and offers private lessons, online instruction, and workshops.