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Date: September 28, 1998
Source: MetroActive
Music
Taiko Time
San
Jose Taiko celebrates 25 years.

Drum of the Parts:
Three members of San Jose Taiko show off some of the drumming troupe's unusual
instruments.
INSIDE A SMALL elementary-school
cafeteria in downtown San Jose on a quiet Sunday morning, 23 adults have
gathered to whack the hell out of some cowhide. The cowhide is stretched
tight over large, hollow drums the shape of wine barrels. The sticks used
to pound these drums resemble small baseball bats.
These people, they run around in knee braces and sweat-filled
bandannas. They shout wildly. They smack the cowhide-covered drums with
such collective force they rattle and loosen the folded-up lunch tables,
the square clocks on the walls, the metal radiator covers that wrap around
the room.
The continuous
pounding travels down the streets and brings neighbors out of their homes.
They watch in silence as grown men and women continue to run around and
smack the drums with great might and in awesome synchronization. One neighbor
asks in a slow, concerned, albeit intrigued voice, "What the hell is going
on?"
San Jose Taiko, one of North America's oldest taiko troupes,
is rehearsing for its 25th anniversary performance, at Stanford Memorial
Auditorium on Saturday (Sept. 26).
To celebrate its quarter-century of existence, San Jose
Taiko founders P.J. and Roy Hirabayashi commissioned internationally known
taiko artists Motofumi Yamaguchi and Shohei Kikuchi to choreograph two new
pieces. The concert, "Rhythm Journey: Expressions in Time," will tell the
story of Japanese immigrants to the Santa Clara County.
"This is not just a celebration of our 25th anniversary,"
Roy Hirabayashi says, "but also an explanation of what taiko is, and how
we got here." To give the commissioned artists a sense of local history,
the Hirabayashis guided Yamaguchi and Kikuchi on a walking tour of San Jose's
Japantown and provided documents detailing immigration to the area.
Bringing international artists to work with the troupe
is a long way from what the couple ever imagined when they started San Jose
Taiko. "I had no idea that it would grow into the musical ensemble that
it is now, or the art performance it has become," Hirabayashi says.
When the Hirabayashis founded San Jose Taiko in 1973, it
was only the third taiko troupe in North America. A small group of young,
third-generation Japanese-Americans--known as Sansei--gathered at the San
Jose Buddhist Church seeking a way to express their experiences through
performance and, in the meantime, learn more about their own culture.
Now there are more than 100 performing taiko groups in
North America, most of which have followed the lead of San Jose Taiko. "What
we have been doing has kind of helped set the pace," Hirabayashi explains.
By including world rhythms, such as African, Latin and American rock and
jazz, San Jose Taiko has created a unique Japanese-American sound while
maintaining its historical meaning.
The Japanese drum, or taiko, is an instrument considered
to "embody the spiritual essence and heartbeat of Japan and its people,
replete with continued possibilities, renewal and transformation." The physical
act of performing--arms swinging like hyper windmills, bodies hopscotching
between drums--is not only a visually impressive experience but also a stunning
demonstration in physical endurance.
"When you tried to define Japanese-American music, it was
really hard," Hirabayashi says. "It's not rap, it's not R&B, it's not
salsa--then what is it? Taiko has become that musical, cultural sound."
As the thumping rehearsal in the cafeteria continues, the
curious neighbors are relieved to learn that their local school has not
turned into a weekend training ground for stress management. One of the
neighbors backs away from the doorway, gladly muttering, "Now, you don't
get to see that everyday, do you?"
Rhythm Journey: Expressions in Time takes place Saturday (Sept.
26) at 8pm at Stanford Memorial Auditorium, Palo Alto. Tickets are $20/$25.
(650/725-ARTS)
Justin Berton
Photo: C.I. Photography
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