Dengaku

大分類Basic Terms of Shinto 神道基本用語集
分野分類 CB宗教学・神道学
文化財分類 CB学術データベース
資料形式 CBテキストデータベース
+項目田楽
+TermsDengaku
テキスト内容A musical performance originating in rice transplanting ceremonies (see ta-asobi). Sa-otome (rice planting maidens) sang songs as they planted young rice shoots. They were accompanied by the music of flutes, drums, and wooden blocks called sasara. Toward the middle of the Heian period, the residents of Kyoto also came to enjoy this performance, and it was incorporated into shrine festivals. Later, professional musicians called dengaku-hôshi appeared, and the entertainment flourished, but it was later superseded in popularity by sarugaku nô. Well-known performances of dengaku may be seen today at festivals at Asakusa Jinja in Tokyo and at Nachi Jinja in Wakayama Prefecture.
+BTS辞書ページURLhttps://d-museum.kokugakuin.ac.jp/bts/detail/?id=3685
-36392009/02/19Administrator00BTS000036田楽DengakuA musical performance originating in rice transplanting ceremonies (see ta-asobi). Sa-otome (rice planting maidens) sang songs as they planted young rice shoots. They were accompanied by the music of flutes, drums, and wooden blocks called sasara. Toward the middle of the Heian period, the residents of Kyoto also came to enjoy this performance, and it was incorporated into shrine festivals. Later, professional musicians called dengaku-hôshi appeared, and the entertainment flourished, but it was later superseded in popularity by sarugaku nô. Well-known performances of dengaku may be seen today at festivals at Asakusa Jinja in Tokyo and at Nachi Jinja in Wakayama Prefecture.36田楽DengakuD01
資料ID8823

PageTop