Taiko (太鼓) or Wadaiko (和太鼓) means “drum/wide drum” in Japanese and the taiko drumming ensemble is known as Kumi-daiko (組太鼓)
I was blown away with Tao Drum – Samurai of the Drum performance at the Palms@Crown.
A lil’ info on the Tao Drum troupe:
- they were formed 16 years ago, with a 10 year plan on establishing themselves
- the troupe is divided to Tao Red and Tao Yellow
- Tao’s homegrown is Aso-Kuju National Park (that’s where they lived, trained, performed. Accommodation with full facilities such as halls, sauna, spa, theater, gym etc.)
The group that performed at the Palms was Tao Red as a recognized some familiar faces:
No pictures allowed during performance but here are some pics from the Tao Drum Gallery
Because they looked like they’re having so much fun, I wanna try it too. Before I start Googling, I found this in my bookmarks
Can’t remember why I bookmarked this last year but.. .yay!!
Contacted the instructor, Toshi Sakamoto and he asked me to come for the basic class (right timing, they were about to start the new term). I figure I could go for the Beginners class instead, since I’ve did drumming and percussion before (as long as its not constantly hitting the downbeats like triple cello parts in Steelpan >.< ….that still haunts me……) and plus I do play Taiko Drum Master (hwa hwa hwa)
Reached there early and got so excited when I hear the drums going on. The people in Abbortsford must be cursing these drums. I walked around the neighbourhood and I can still hear it a block a way.. its so LOUDDDDD (I guess that’s just how it is, Taiko Drums were meant to motivate military troops during war)
Taiko drumming isn’t just about hitting the drums. Its also about the pose, body movements making it all a great work out!!!
These moves were part of the Umai, which generally have more spirited movements based on the rhythm. We had a brief session on Hachijodaiko, with two person hitting the drums at both sides and the rest of us following them, like a call and response.
Looking forward to my classes 🙂