CDZ Collegium Musica & Clark College: Musical Travel to Japan, featuring Miho Yamaji, koto & Kodō Araki, shakuhachi
Free
- Miho Yamaji, koto
- Hanz Araki (Hanzaburo, Araki Kodō VI), shakuhachi
Miho Yamaji's (koto, Japanese zither) U.S. and Oregon premiere performance with Kodō Akari VI (shakuhachi, bamboo flute).
About Clark College Music Department
https://www.clark.edu/academics/programs/creative-and-communication-arts/music/index.php
About Miho Yamaji, koto
About Hanz Araki (Hanzaburo, Araki Kodō VI), shakuhachi
For six generations, the Araki family has carried the Kodō name and its perspective on the tradition of Kinko-Ryū shakuhachi. Named for his great-great grandfather, Hanzaburō, or Hanz as he's commonly known, made his professional debut in 1988 in Shimonoseki, Japan where he was given the name Baikyoku by his father, Kodō Araki V. He attained the name Kodō at his father's retirement ceremony in Tokyo in 2009. Hanz performed and taught in Japan until 1992 when he returned to the United States and shifted his focus almost entirely to performing. Notable appearances include The Newport Folk Festival, The Vancouver Folk Festival, Celtic Connections in Glasgow, Kiyomizu Temple in Kyoto, The Gates Estate, and was a featured soloist for The Seattle Symphony "Celebrate Asia" concert in 2013. He was also invited to perform and speak at the Interdependence Day Celebration in Mexico City and The Future of Music Coalition conference in Rio de Janeiro. In addition to his career in traditional Japanese music Hanz is a Juno Award-winning Irish flute and whistle player and singer. His most recent album of Irish music was recorded in his mother’s ancestral village of Dingle, Co. Kerry with Lúnasa founding member Donogh Hennessy producing.
https://www.hanzaraki.com/Penguin Union Building at Clark College
1933 Fort Vancouver WayVancouver, WA 98663
United States
https://www.clark.edu/about/visitors-guide/getting-to-clark/maps/floor_plans/Gaiser-PUB_map.pdf