
Tonkori - Wikipedia
The tonkori (トンコリ) is a plucked string instrument played by the Ainu people of Hokkaidō, northern Japan and Sakhalin. It generally has five strings, which are not stopped or fretted but …
Tonkari (トンコリ) - Japanese (Ainu) | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Played by the indigenous Ainu people of northern Japan to accompany ritual, song and dance, the tonkori an instrument on the verge of extinction by the 1970s. Today it is being revived as …
彤谷丽琴 - 维基百科,自由的百科全书
2022年11月3日 · 彤谷丽琴 (日语: トンコリ, 罗马化:tonkori)是 日本 北海道 一种 弦乐器,通常有五弦,所以又被日本译为 五弦琴。 琴有三弦和六弦之分,但非常少见,文献中能在 …
TONKORI Ainu String Instruments and Woodcarver Shigehiro …
2022年6月15日 · Introducing the tonkori, the sole traditional string instrument of the Ainu people, whose indigenous population, from the seventeenth into the nineteenth century, spread north …
Tonkori | musical instrument | Britannica
In Japanese music: Early evidence …a flute—as well as a tonkori zither with two to five strings. It is unlike the zither on the lap of the earlier tomb figure in both its shape and playing position, …
The Journey of the Tonkori: A Multicultural Transmission
The tonkori is emblematic as a musical instrument that allows its practitioners to convey a distinct Ainu indigeneity within Japanese society, a notion that challenges accepted beliefs in Japan of …
Inserting a soul through the belly button of a tonkori
The tonkori is a five-stringed instrument handed down by the Ainu of Sakhalin. It has a tone quality that pierces the body, and melodies that repeat as if a prayer were being offered. The …
Ainu Musical Instrument 2: Tonkori - kagurastudies
2020年9月13日 · The picture above shows one of Ainu's musical instruments named tonkori. It is a plucked string instrument. The characteristic of this instrument is that players use only notes …
トンコリ教室
アイヌの伝統楽器「トンコリ」を弾いてみよう! シンプルな5弦の竪琴。 心はやすらぎ、精神は高みに! Let's play the traditional Ainu instrument, "Tonkori"! It's a simple five-string vertical …
Tonkori — Wikipedia Republished // WIKI 2
The tonkori (トンコリ) is a plucked string instrument played by the Ainu people of Hokkaidō, northern Japan and Sakhalin. It generally has five strings, which are not stopped or fretted but …