Product Details
Okinawa Rough Guide To The Mu

Okinawa Rough Guide To The Mu
Various

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Buy at Amazon


3 new or used available from CDN$ 8.99

Average customer review:
(3 )

Track Listing

  1. Rinsho Kadekaru feat. Seijin Noborikawa: Koko Kuduchi from Marafuku Records single
  2. Chieko Iha & Four Sisters: Shimajima Kaisha from the Album Chieko Iha Meets Kuricorder
  3. Takashi Hirayasu & Bob Brozman: Chon Chon Kijimuna from the album Jin Jin / Firefly
  4. Shisars: Itta Anma Makaiga - Karabato
  5. Misako Ohshiro: Uranami Bushi from the album Katumui
  6. Rinji Kadekaru: Jidai No Nagare from the album My Sweet Home
  7. Misako Koja: Warabi Gami from the CD single Warabi Gami
  8. Tetsuhiro Daiku:Koinaa Yunta from the album Agarooza
  9. Akanars: Go-Go Chinbora from the album Okinawa Hits & Standards
  10. Rikki: Ikunnya Kang-Yoisura from the album Arinutou
  11. Ryukyu Underground: Tinsagu Nu Hana Dub
  12. Donto: Jin Jin
  13. The Boom: Tida Akara, Nami Kiara from the CD single Sanshin 3000
  14. Seijin Noborikawa: Naritai Bushi from the album Spiritul Unity
  15. Nenes: Umkaji from the album Okimawa, Memorial Nenes
  16. The Surf Champlers: Toshin Doi from the album Champloo A Go Go

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #147129 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-08-01
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Compilation

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.co.uk
If Paul Fisher's Rough Guide to the Music of Japan was rooted in clubland, his new compilation The Rough Guide to the Music of Okinawa takes us deep into the peasant past. Japan's southernmost archipelago--which the Japanese themselves regard as exotic--is pervaded by music that will strike Western listeners as both congenial and rivetingly strange. Many of the musicians in these excellently chosen tracks are passing on folk styles they learned from their grandparents and the dominant instrument is the sanshin, a three-stringed banjo with a snakeskin soundbox and a much more intimate sound than the shamisen, which is its bigger mainland counterpart. The ballad-singers here really compel you to listen: the greatest--Rinsho Kaderaku--died last year but his son Rinji has the same buttonholing sweetness. Some of the female singers are extraordinary, notably Ritsuki Nakano with her delicate ornamentation and Misako Oshiro with her clean, strong tone. There are some remarkable fusions, including Takashi Hirayasu and Bob Brozman (check out their Nankuru Naisa CD) and an English-American duo who combine traditional Okinawan folk styles with hip-hop, dub and various forms of electronica. --Michael Church

Album Description
Fine collection of all various style of music to come out of Okinawa ranging from traditional to techno.

Album Details
Fine Collection of all Various Style of Music to Come Out of Okinawa Ranging from Traditional to Techno.