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Kodo Drummers of Japan

Thirty-nine years ago, a small group of young people in Japan yearned for a new way to live. Disappointed with the direction of modern Kodo DrummersJapanese society and eager to rediscover traditional roots and values, they left their busy urban cultures behind and traveled north to remote Sado Island. For centuries the island had been an isle of banishment for politicians, artists, writers and others who found themselves at odds with the established culture of the times.

They found a home in an abandoned schoolhouse by the sea and began to play the world's oldest instrument, the drum (taiko). Day and night, they expressed their hope and fear, joy and wonder upon the taiko, learning its voices and ancient wisdom. To build endurance, they woke before dawn and ran long distances through the bamboo forests and rice fields. Surrounded by Sado Island's rich performing arts traditions, they began to study other instruments as well—the shamisen, koto and shakuhachi. They explored dance, song, and stagecraft along with the taiko's limitless depth and range.

There was not only a primal fierceness and determination to their work, but a playful, child-like curiosity as well, a fundamental openness to the instrument's infinite potential. So they called themselves Kodo, which means ‘heartbeat’ but also ‘children of the drum.’ Kodo learned that the sound of taiko is felt in the body, as much as heard.

Kodo exploded onto the world stage at the Berlin Festival in 1981 and have since delivered over 3,300 performances in more than 46 countries, from war-torn Croatia to New York's Carnegie Hall. Through constant collaborations with musicians, dancers, singers and actors in many countries, Kodo relentlessly explores the limits of the taiko and the closely-related traditional Japanese performing arts. The group's many recordings are available nearly everywhere.

 
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