Kodo -- Japanese Drum Performance -- Review
Kodo
Japanese
Drum Performance -- January 29, 2017
Zellerbach
Hall, Berkeley, California
This wasn't a performance I would have chosen for
myself. A friend invited me and we
went. It was an amazing spectacle. It awakened me to the vast possibilities of
percussion as an expressive language.
Everything from the most delicate whispers to the most brutal violence
can be conveyed through the rhythmic sounds of percussion. There is pitch, harmony, intonation, texture,
rhythm, counterpoint, in an endless array of combinations and colors and
moods.
The guys that play these drums are not just musicians, they
are world class athletes. Their bodies are
sleek and lean. Their arms, shoulders
and chests ripple with perfectly sculpted, powerful muscles. This wasn't just a music performance, it was
a festival of hypermasculinity.
It so happened that my friend and I could not sit
together. Our seats were one row
apart. By chance and good fortune, a
young Japanese girl came in and occupied the seat next to me. It turned out she knew one of the players on
the stage and had been herself part of a similar drumming group for women when
she was in college. She told me that it is
was traditionally an all male art form, but there were girls' groups on some
college campuses. She said the guys on
the stage train rigorously, rising at 5am to jog and work out. I wondered at how old they might be as it
seems to be extremely physically demanding and they all looked quite
young. She told me they tended to be
young but some were in their 30s and 40s, which surprised me a little bit.
Many different kinds of drums were used as well as many
different means for making sound with the drum:
everything from fingernails and forearms, to wooden batons that were
slung against the drum heads with excruciating force. It is interesting how this chorus of varied
drum sounds and rhythms creates an emotional tenor that builds to a riveting
intensity. It was a polished, moving
performance of the highest caliber of virtuosity and interest. I was so glad to be introduced to it.