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Nagata
Shachu Biographies Kiyoshi
Nagata
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Kiyoshi
Nagata (taiko,shinobue, and shakuhachi) Since 1998 Kiyoshi has taught a credit course in taiko at the University of Toronto's Faculty of Music. In September 2003, he began teaching a public course at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. For eight years, he instructed two community groups, Isshin Daiko in Toronto and Do-Kon Daiko in Burlington, which he helped establish in 1995. Kiyoshi is also regularly invited by universities and taiko groups to conduct workshops and present lectures. In 1994, Kiyoshi founded the cross-cultural percussion ensemble, Humdrum, whose debut Toronto performance was ranked fourth in Now Magazine's "Top Ten Concerts of 1995". He has composed and performed taiko music for dance, theatre, film and radio and continues to collaborate with artists from all genres of music including traditional Japanese instrumentalists. |
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Scott
Kusano (taiko, shinobue, shakuhachi) Scott has played taiko on and off since childhood first with the Toronto Suwa Daiko and later in 1995, as one of the original members of Isshin Daiko, a group that was formed by the Toronto Buddhist Church and Kiyoshi Nagata. It was through this encounter that Scott became a founding member of Nagata Shachu beginning a taiko career spanning over a decade. In 2003, while living in Fukuoka,
Japan, Scott was instructed in the making and performing of the shakuhachi
by the late Nomiyama Higao of Kasuga-shi. Though Scott's training was
cut short due to Mr. Nomiyama's lung cancer, he continues to strive for
the warmth and strength of tone that were the legacy of Mr. Nomiyama's
style. |
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Aki
Takahashi (taiko,
vocals, and shamisen) Aki began to study the three-stringed Tsugaru Shamisen and folk singing in Kyoto and was able to make the acquaintance of other musicians like her who were trying to keep this traditional music alive. Since moving to Canada in 2000, she has continued to share her music with audiences in a wide variety of venues ranging from street performing to local festivals such as the Canadian Tulip Festival and the Ottawa Folk Festival. Aki is also the founder of
the Japanese Folk Music Collective Ten
Ten |
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Akemi
Akachi (taiko) Akemi Akachi is a Japanese descendant born and raised in Mexico. She began studying piano at the age of four. She completed her Bachelor degree in Composition at Las Rosas Conservatory in Mexico in 2004. Akemi has been involved in the creation of multidisciplinary projects with choreographers and dancers. She has taught music theory, ear training and sight singing to children and university music students. Her pieces have been performed in different venues both in Mexico and Canada. She moved to Toronto to earn her Masters degree in Composition at the University of Toronto, graduating in 2008. While studying there she took the Taiko course taught by Kiyoshi Nagata and found a deep passion for this art form. |
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Tony Nguyen was introduced to the clarinet at the age of eleven and quickly developed a passion for music. He continued his studies throughout high school where he played clarinet, viola, and tenor sax in various ensembles and became extremely active within the musical community. He decided to pursue his musical studies at the University of Toronto in Music Education, where he enrolled in the taiko drumming course taught by Kiyoshi Nagata. Instantly, he became interested in the art form and kept taking taiko courses at the Nagata Shachu studio. Tony is now studying at the University of Toronto in hopes to become a music educator, while continuing to develop his taiko playing.
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Heidi
Chan (taiko and shinobue) |
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