A yamahoko band playing Gion Festival music, known as Gionbayashi, during the parade of floats.

 

In what must surely be a first of its kind, the Yomiuri Shimbun carries a report about the promotion of Gion Festival overseas via music concerts in Boston, USA.  It’s an unexpected development in the increasing internationalisation of Shinto, and part of a trend to build greater awareness of the religion overseas

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Kyoto’s Gion festival band to hold 1st overseas concert
April 29, 2014   The Yomiuri Shimbun

For the first time in more than 1,000 years, the festive music played on yamahoko floats during Kyoto’s Gion festival will be performed overseas, when five concerts are held in Boston early next month.

Members of the band are looking forward to the performances as they believe the concerts will be a good opportunity for people abroad to learn about Japanese traditional music and sounds, according to the federation of yamahoko float-preserving associations in Kyoto.

The Naginata float takes its name from what looks like a long sword (naginata) soaring upwards above it

The band belongs to the naginata-hoko (Japanese long halberd) float, which leads the procession of floats every year. The band, known for creating the light sounds of “Kon-chiki-chin,” with a kane (bell-like Japanese gong), a flute and a drum, plays traditional music during the yamahoko parade and the Yoiyama festival, to be held on the eve of the main event.

They start practicing at the meeting places of neighborhood associations after “Kippu-iri,” held July 1-5, a ritual held before all other events related to the festival.

According to the sources, the decision to hold the concerts was made after the Japan Society of Boston, a local friendship group, approached naginata-hoko player Masataka Hata, 60, president of incense manufacturer Shoeido Incense Co.  “We’d love to have a chance to experience Kyoto culture,” members of the society said.

Nineteen members of the band will visit the United States for one week starting on May 4 and give concerts at five venues, including a local public high school and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The band will perform alongside video footage of Hoko-tate, the building of floats, and a yamahoko parade.

“We hope this concert tour will encourage people overseas to come to the Gion festival,” said Tatsuya Ishiwa, 62, the leader of the band.

Musicians perched high up on one of the Gion floats, known as yamahoko