- Chōtatsurō Imafuji
Infobox musical artist
Name=Imafuji Chōtatsurō
今藤長龍郎
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Background= non_vocal_instrumentalist
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Born=1969
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Origin=Tokyo ,Japan
Instrument=Shamisen
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Genre="Nagauta "
Occupation=Musician, songwriter, educator
Years_active=1980 -present
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Associated_acts=Kunitachi College of Music ,the Tricycle
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Notable_instruments=Chōtatsurō Imafuji (今藤長龍郎, "Imafuji Chōtatsurō")(born
1969 ) is a Japaneseshamisen player in the "nagauta " tradition. He is classically trained as an accompanist tokabuki chanters, but performs in a number of related styles as well, such as "buyō " (traditional Japanese dance). He is a part-time lecturer atKunitachi College of Music , heads the shamisen section ofthe Tricycle performance troupe of which he is a founding member, and is involved in a number of other organizations and projects which aim to keep Japan's traditional performing arts alive and to pass them on to the next generations.The son of
Naoyuki Imafuji , Chōtatsurō is part of a long and prestigious lineage of "nagauta" artists. He is the nephew ofMeishō Tōsha andYoshio Nakagawa , and is also related toShūhō Tōsha of theTōsha school of traditional musicians.Born in
Tokyo in 1969, he first began to be taughtpiano at the age of four. He began studying underRyōko Imafuji at the age of ten, and made his stage debut the following year, in 1980. In 1985, he was granted the name Chōtatsurō byChōjūrō Imafuji , and attended university at theTokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music . Upon his graduation in 1991, he began to study formally under his uncle Meishō Tōsha and his father. The same year, he appeared onNHK programs on both traditional Japanese and Western music, as well as performing at the National Theater andKabuki-za .Chōtatsurō does not regularly perform at the mainstream kabuki theaters, generally being involved in projects more related directly to music and dance than to theatre. However, he has performed at the Kabuki-za, and has worked with the great kabuki actors
Nakamura Kantarō II ,Nakamura Shichinosuke II , andNakamura Shidō II among others. He performed at the2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, and has made tours to England twice, in 2005 and 2007. In 2005, he was presented with the Award of the Foundation for the Development of Traditional Japanese Culture.Today he continues to teach both at Kunitachi College of Music and more privately, is a member of a league of composers of new works in the traditional style, and is involved in a number of other projects that encourage and support the traditional arts.
References
* [http://japan.japo-net.or.jp/cultivate/recipient/recipient_9.shtml Foundation for the Development of Traditional Japanese Culture]
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