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	<title>midorikai &#187; music</title>
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	<description>eric dean&#039;s year of tea study in kyoto</description>
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		<title>Kencha-shiki; Ginkakuji</title>
		<link>http://midorikai.ericdean.org/2008/04/18/kencha-shiki-ginkakuji/</link>
		<comments>http://midorikai.ericdean.org/2008/04/18/kencha-shiki-ginkakuji/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Apr 2008 08:00:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Eric Dean</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chashitsu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dōgu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[food]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[funny hats]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gagaku]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ginkakuji]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hideyoshi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kencha-shiki]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oiemoto]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[okashi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rikyū]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rikyū Hyakushu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shintō]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shōin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shopping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[temae]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tenshin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[weather]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yoshimasa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://midorikai.ericdean.org/?p=58</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Low clouds clung to the mountainsides flanking the city as morning broke wet and chilly; it looked like good tea weather to me. At ten minutes before nine, Midorikai met Hamana-sensei in front of the Urasenke Center, taking shelter from the rain beneath the overhanging entranceway until our taxis arrived. We travelled east across town [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Low clouds clung to the mountainsides flanking the city as morning broke wet and chilly; it looked like good tea weather to me.<span id="more-58"></span> At ten minutes before nine, Midorikai met Hamana-sensei in front of the Urasenke Center, taking shelter from the rain beneath the overhanging entranceway until our taxis arrived. We travelled east across town to Hokoku shrine, site of the tomb of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the 16th century shogun and patron of tea to whom Sen Rikyū was once friend and advisor, before the warlord, for unclear reasons, ordered the tea master to kill himself. Sometime in the succeeding centuries Hideyoshi was defied, and now tea is prepared for him once a year in a Shinto ceremony of offering; this year it was Urasenke’s turn to perform the ritual, and Oiemoto invited Midorikai to join a small group of witnesses to the occasion.</p>
<p>A long, broad flight of stone steps climbs the hillside to the tomb, hidden in deep foliage. At its foot sits a spacious wooden pavilion. Today folded white strips of paper hung from a rope strung around the structure just below the roof line to signify ritual purity within its perimeter. On either side of the pavilion, tarps sheltered the spectators’ seats: on one side, wealthy and influential individuals, mostly older men in dark suits (Hamana-sensei pointed out a <em>kama</em>-maker to me); on the other, 3rd-year Japanese Urasenke students and the Midorikai group, five of us still in western clothes, the rest in a restrained kaleidoscope of <em>kimono</em>. The crowd numbered just over a hundred in all.</p>
<p>Beneath the pavilion, an elevated stretch of <em>tatami</em> led to a setup for <em>temae</em>: an stand of unfinished wood called a <em>daisu</em>, bearing on its top shelf two <em>tenmoku chawan</em>&#8211;tea bowls, one gold, the other silver, on individual stands&#8211;and two <em>natsume</em> enclosed in white cloth covers closed with braided cords, one purple, the other crimson, in elegant knots. On the <em>daisu</em>’s bottom shelf were the fresh water container (<em>mizusashi</em>), a bamboo dipper (<em>hishaku</em>) held vertically in its own rack, and the steaming <em>kama</em>.</p>
<p>To the right of the <em>tatami</em> platform sat several small wooden tables bearing platters of food offerings: fish, fruit and vegetables, <em>mochi</em>, water, <em>sake</em>, rice.</p>
<p>The crowd took their seats and quieted down as Oiemoto, his wife, and a small entourage approached the pavilion and were greeted by a group of Shinto priests in colorful outfits topped by hats resembling oven mitts made of giant avocados. Three musicians in similar attire took their places before ancient, ornate instruments at the back of the pavilion (the side furthest from the steps to Hideyoshi’s tomb, that is) and began to play the ancient music called <em>gakaku</em> on percussion and small wind instruments. (One, a silver-bound cluster of bamboo set vertically, allows the player to maintain a drone of subtly shifting unearthly chords that underpins the arrangements.)</p>
<p>One priest read an invocation, another purified each participant in the ceremony (including us, the witnesses) in turn with a shaggy pom-pom of folded paper strips on a stick. Then Oiemoto, in black <em>kimono</em>, stepped out of his <em>zori</em> and onto the <em>tatami</em>. He approached the <em>daisu</em>, facing Hideyoshi’s tomb, sat, and prepared <em>koicha</em>, thick tea. I could see few of his movements from behind the Japanese students and priests, but I did see him don a white surgical mask just before opening the <em>natsume</em>, not to take it off again until the tea was whisked and he’d re-covered the bowl with a thin sheet of what I assumed was wood; Hamana-sensei explained that human breath would be thought to befoul the tea and make it unfit to offer the <em>kami-sama</em>. I saw enough, too, to begin to understand a bit of tea philosophy that came my way recently.</p>
<p>There is a collection of a hundred short verses attributed to Sen Rikyū that outlines many of the ideals of our discipline. One of them is translated, “Practice constitutes learning from one, becoming cognizant of ten, then returning from ten to one, the beginning.” Which reminds me of a certain Christian philosopher’s (Francis Schaeffer, maybe?) pursuit of “the simplicity on the far side of complexity.” At any rate, I’ve seen clumsy and hesitant <em>temae</em> (heck, I <em>do</em> clumsy and hesitant <em>temae</em>), and I’ve seen confident and elegant <em>temae</em>. But Oiemoto’s movements were so controlled, so understated and precise, that his preparation looked quite effortless&#8211;not mannered in the slightest. Someone who didn’t know what he was watching might well think that there wasn’t much to making tea in this fashion. Which, of course, is the whole idea. All the practice, all the discipline, all the <em>kata</em> are ultimately not for <em>performance</em> but for hospitality: one person making tea for another.</p>
<p>Oiemoto went on to make thin tea, <em>usucha</em>, with the variations in technique required, and, of course, with the mask, and both bowls of tea were delivered to the priests, who set them on a table at Hideyoshi’s side of the pavilion and uncovered each briefly to allow his spirit to imbibe. The priests also moved the food offerings from the side of the pavilion to its front, and everything was officially handed over to the <em>kami-sama</em> for his enjoyment.</p>
<p>After another invocation and more eerie music, the ceremony concluded, and as the crowd filed out and the <em>dōgu</em> were cleaned and boxed up, Oiemoto gathered the Urasenke students around him and spoke briefly on the history of the <em>kencha</em> tea offering and the utensils traditionally used. (When performed at Buddhist temples, the preparation calls for fine lacquered <em>dōgu</em>; at Shinto shrines, unvarnished wood ones.) He invited us, too, to examine the <em>dōgu</em>. I admired the bare wood <em>natsume</em>, one’s lid marked with Oiemoto’s crest, the <em>ichō</em> leaf, the other with Okusama’s, a simple spiral.</p>
<p>We repaired to a giant cloth tent erected on a nearby lawn too late to keep the ground from getting soggy, and sat on benches while we were served sweets and tea by girls with muddy <em>tabi</em>. Then Hamana-sensei led us to a tea house neighboring the shrine, where we waited in a little <em>machiai</em> and admired a small collection of <em>dōgu</em>: everyone liked very much the dark red <em>chawan</em> by the ninth-generation head of the <em>Raku</em> ceramics tradition and the broken-and-repaired kettle. Its <em>kantsuki</em>, the small molded rings through which larger rings (<em>kan</em>) are threaded to lift the kettle were shaped like little monkeys with arms outstretched; we heard that this may have been a reference to Hideyoshi, a homely little man whose nickname was “monkey.”</p>
<p>The we were summoned into the tea room. As we began to eat our sweets (<em>hanaikada</em>, slender bars of translucent lavender mochi filled with red bean paste), a quiet gasp ran around the room: Oiemoto had just entered. He told us, apparently, to relax, warned us that the sweets were a bit chewy, and talked at us for a while. (I never did get a translation.) On his way out, he looked at me and asked if the sweets had been okay. I managed a frantic affirmative nod.</p>
<p>After tea, we moved further through the complex of <em>tatami</em>-floored buildings and sat in another room where a light meal, <em>tenshin</em>, was served. If I ever have to feed someone and want them not to linger, I decided, I’ll have them eat sitting <em>seiza</em>. The traditional Japanese food (rice; <em>miso</em> soup; little shrimp with crispy legs and feelers intact, to be eaten whole; assorted little mystery bites of egg and tofu and thins from the sea; tea) was quite tasty, of course, but I had no idea if I was eating it with any degree of decorum. Nor did I remember what Gary-sensei had told us a week before: that at the end of such a meal, the guests are to blot their dishes clean with <em>kaishi</em> paper moistened in the condensation from the lid of the soup bowl. I did this in a panic just before my tray was taken away, and staggered out of the room with knees screaming and suit pockets bulging with dirty wads of paper.</p>
<p>Since we had the afternoon free, Hamana-sensei decided to take us to Ginkakuji, the temple that was once the private villa of retired shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa, who took office at age 8 and quit at 29 to become a monk and full-time devotee and patron of the arts. The main temple building was in the third month or so of a projected 26-month renovation, and so was being disassembled under tarps, but the gardens remained stunning, as did the main reason for our visit: tours were being given of one of the complex’s usually-closed buildings, the <em>Tōgudō</em>, besides the tarped Kannon Hall the only structure on the property never destroyed by fire. In the <em>Tōgudō</em> is Yoshimasa’s personal study, a room named <em>Dōjinsai</em>, which is considered to be the prototype for the later development of tea room architecture. It is an old-style <em>shōin</em> room, not a tea room, and so has a built-in writing desk under a window and split-level shelves (<em>chigaidana</em>) instead of a <em>tokonoma</em>, but its four and a half <em>tatami</em> mats and <em>ro</em>, and the fact that Yoshimasa did apparently make tea in the room, make it part of our history.</p>
<p>We hiked up the hillside at the edge of the property to see <em>chanoi</em>, the spring from which Yoshimasa drew his water for tea, and enjoyed the elevated view of the city to the west. Then we exited via the gift shop and Hamana-sensei bought us all green tea-flavored soft-serve ice cream before we took taxis home.</p>
<p>I had stashed some unclaimed sandwiches and ate one for dinner instead of going to the <em>shokudō</em>. Then I met Sean, Szymon, and a few of the others to visit a local <em>kimono</em> shop, where we didn’t buy anything. We took the long way home, stopping by a cheap <em>dōgu</em> shop of Szymon’s recommendation that offers ludicrous discounts to Midorikai students; we picked up cheap <em>chasen</em> and <em>chashaku</em> to practice with, and <em>chakin</em> and little plastic pouches to keep damp <em>chakin</em> in for Monday’s practice <em>chaji</em>, at which we’ll have thick tea, which is served in a common bowl that should have its rim wiped by each guest after drinking and before passing it along. At a shoe store I picked up some <em>zori</em> sandals; thank goodness sizes big enough for my feet are available here.</p>
<p>Buying <em>dōgu</em> is what passes for Friday night excitement around here, so having done that, we were in for the evening.</p>
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		<title>Miyako odori</title>
		<link>http://midorikai.ericdean.org/2008/04/12/miyako-odori/</link>
		<comments>http://midorikai.ericdean.org/2008/04/12/miyako-odori/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Apr 2008 08:00:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Eric Dean</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Daisōshō]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[food]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[geiko]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[geisha]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hanami]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miyako Odori]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ryūrei]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sanjō]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shopping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tale of Genji]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tea circus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[walking]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://midorikai.ericdean.org/?p=42</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After a week of more or less hurried mornings, it was nice to sleep in and then knock around my room, doing some cleaning and enjoying my breakfast sandwich.
Daisōshō, the retired (though still very active) 15th generation Grand Master of the Urasenke line, had given all the students tickets to the annual Miyako Odori dance [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After a week of more or less hurried mornings, it was nice to sleep in and then knock around my room, doing some cleaning and enjoying my breakfast sandwich.<span id="more-42"></span></p>
<p>Daisōshō, the retired (though still very active) 15th generation Grand Master of the Urasenke line, had given all the students tickets to the annual Miyako Odori dance presentation (this year’s was the 136th), so in the afternoon, Midorikai got dressed up once again and hailed taxis to take us to Gion, Kyoto’s old <em>geiko</em> (the local term for <em>geisha</em>) district. Automobiles and pedestrians vied for passage through the narrow streets of two-story wooden buildings, made considerably less charming by the addition of temporary signposts in garish oranges and grays advertising the <em>odori</em>.</p>
<p>Our tickets admitted us to the <em>Gionkobu Kaburenjo</em> theater complex, a handsome old cluster of buildings through which attendants herd four performances’ worth of visitors a day every day in April. We tramped across the blue-carpeted floors and down halls bright with circus-like red and white-striped wall hangings. A hundred or so at a time, deluxe ticket holders like us were funneled up a flight of stairs into a large room full of low, long tables and stools. At the front of the room, a <em>geiko</em> in full makeup and <em>kimono</em> was preparing tea in a style called <em>ryūrei</em>, developed in the late 19th century for the benefit of foreigners who couldn’t or wouldn’t sit on the floor in traditional <em>seiza</em> style. In <em>ryūrei</em>, host and guests alike sit like Westerners; it’s a lot more comfortable, of course, but it looked silly to me, and somehow more self-consciously mannered than the older styles. It didn’t help that the huge crowd kept cameras firing throughout; that a mobile phone some rows over rang halfway through with the title music from <em>Austin Powers</em>; that an efficient fleet of assistants distributed sweets and tea perfunctorily without any of the expected formalities of phrase and gesture; that as soon as our empty tea bowls were taken away, wranglers instructed us loudly to leave as quickly as possible to make room for the next lot of guests; that a few sips of my tea revealed an unwhisked lump clinging malignantly to the bottom of the bowl. On the other hand, we got to keep the rather pretty little plates our sweets were served on.</p>
<p>Next we got a brief glimpse of the lovely garden in the complex’s open central courtyard before we reached the waiting lobby for the show itself, where a good dozen vendors sold souvenirs, tea, sweets, books, elegant stationery, gaudy fabrics, and any number of things stamped with the likeness of unofficial national deity Hello Kitty.</p>
<p>The theater itself was large and richly appointed with comfortable seats in dark red velvet on the main floor and balcony, and tatami mats in the galleries for holders of less expensive tickets. The hour-long performance featured a dozen or so live musicians on either side of the front of the hall&#8211;<em>shamisen</em> to stage left, drums and shrill flutes (I can’t be expected to know the Japanese name of absolutely everything, can I?) to the right&#8211;maintaining a near-constant backdrop of the traditional-sounding noise that I don’t expect to ever acquire an appreciation of. (It wasn’t always obvious to my ears, to begin with, that both sides of the orchestra were in fact attempting to execute the same piece of music.) One, and sometimes all, of the <em>shamisen</em> players sang a text that doubtless shed great light for Japanese speakers on what was happening onstage; the percussionists would periodically do some call-and-response rhythmic shouting.</p>
<p>I don’t get Japanese dance any more than I get Japanese music. I appreciate the elegant movement and precise body control, but after five or so minutes of it, I feel like the point has been made. A working knowledge of Japanese and consequent ability to follow what plot was being suggested onstage (the program said it had been adapted from <em>The Tale of Genji</em>, the world’s oldest surviving novel and a product of proud Japan, which is celebrating the thousandth anniversary of the book’s publication this year) would probably have helped. As it was, I had to settle for enjoying the dazzling <em>kimono</em> and clever scene changes; happily, there was quite a lot there to enjoy. Also from time to time I would amuse myself by trying to imagine what various of the dancers looked like with her hair down and makeup off.</p>
<p>Szymon, Verena and I saved money and got exercise by walking back to the dorms. It took us about an hour at a brisk pace that I really shouldn’t have attempted in dress shoes; we followed the Kamo river most of the way uptown. The early evening had brought grey skies and a biting wind, but young couples, amateur photographers, and one inexplicable trombonist crowded the river’s steep brick banks, while a few late <em>hanami</em> parties soldiered on beneath much-thinned <em>sakura</em>.</p>
<p>Sean and I took a bus down Horikawa to a long shopping arcade called <em>Sanjō</em> that had been recommended to us, only to find that almost all its merchants had closed up before 7 on a Saturday night. We bought <em>takoyaki</em> for supper from one of the few open businesses and hit up a 100-yen shop for snacks and the sorts of housewares that we’re still discovering we need after a week and a half in our new home. And then we drank beer and listened to the Beach Boys in Sean’s room until bedtime.</p>
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