The music of Japan includes a wide array of styles both distinctly
traditional and
modern.
Traditional Japanese music is quite different from
Western music and is based on the intervals of human breathing rather than mathematical timing; traditional music also typically slides between notes, a feature also not commonly found in Western music. The word for music in Japanese is
ongaku (音楽), combining the kanji
on (音, "sound") with the kanji
gaku (楽, "enjoyment"). Major aesthetic concepts are
jo-ha-kyū and
ma.
Jo-ha-kyū (序破急) roughly translates to "beginning, break, rapid", it essentially means that all actions or efforts should begin slowly, speed up, and then end swiftly.
Ma literally means a space or interval between two points (in space or time).
uki-ma implies a slight lengthening of the first of a pair of beats, while
tsume-ma implies the reverse. It is this meaning of timing that is seen as a unique aesthetic to explain otherwise inexplicable aspects of Japanese performing arts.
History of traditional music Traditional Japanese music finds its first major historic periods in the
Nara (710–794) and
Heian (794–1185) periods. The two most common kinds of music during this time were the music of the court (
Gagaku) and the music of Buddhist rituals (
shōmyō). The court music was all of Chinese, Korean, or Indian origin and was played primarily by foreign musicians in its original style. At the same time, Buddhist ritual music exerted some influence on the native vocal style. Court music in general was declining, while there was a steady growth of more theatrical arts. Japan's indigenous musical culture can still be found in much of folk music and the music of Shinto festivals in local communities. They were further experimented with and developed by Japan. which became the ritual instrument of the
Fuke sect of Zen monks. By the middle of the eighteenth century, in secular performances, the
shamisen lute and
koto, invented in China and brought to Japan during the
Nara Period, 13-string
zither as used for genteel entertainment and professionally controlled by blind musicians who had the rights to
heike narrative. with most of the market dominated by
Japanese artists. Local music often appears at
karaoke venues on lease from
record labels. Western music has been adopted and adapted to the Japanese context and has often in the process become Japanized (domesticated) and different from its model. Hybrid music has resulted, such as
enka, J-pop, and 'contemporary Japanese music' (
gendai hōgaku) or 'new Japanese music' (
shin-hōgaku). Japanese music further evolved in the jazz, pop, R&B, and Rock music genres and continues into today. Popular artists of the 20th-21st centuries include
Yoko Ono,
Suzuka Nakamoto,
Koji Tamaki,
Hideto Takarai,
Takahiro Moriuchi,
Kenshi Yonezu, and
Haruomi Hosono. Popular groups of the same eras include
The Oral Cigarettes,
Yoasobi,
Bump of Chicken,
King Gnu,
Mrs. Green Apple,
Fishmans, and
Perfume. ==Performing arts==