June 30, 2021

2


 

Haiku - Basho, pg. 25 Lips too Chilled

 



Cherry Blossoms –

lights

of years past.



Pg. 25, Lips to Chilled



Interpretation 1:

Are the cherry blossoms metaphorically “lights of years past”, each petal containing the refraction of light caught in that moment in time, absorbing and retaining a snippet movie of fossilized existence? Is this an ancient Chinese multi-verse theory?

One person (man or woman, who knows?) is reflecting on their life, using this tree as a mental tool for visualizing their past years, perhaps also incorporation of a routined life and living in the same home town all his life. Ex: The cherry blossoms, the spectator has seen for years and years each year, continuously. Maybe this implies a scene of an old person reminiscing at the end of their lives, we get a feeling of nostalgia and the insight to a full life of a singular person.

There is a feeling of life and its memories as brief as the bloom of the cherry blossoms. The very Japanese lament of life’s transience.



Interpretation 2:

Is this more literally just a scene depiction of a Spring Time Japanese Festival, and the poem should be read as, “Cherry blossoms, AND lights of years past”? The focus on tradition, festivities, spring time aura. To be noted, this implies the setting is at NIGHT TIME. Lights are lit, probably paper lanterns, and the cherry blossom trees fray and swoah to a soft breeze. Perhaps there is a subtle innocent touch of romance.

June 26, 2021

1


 

Haiku - Basho, pg. 37 Lips too Chilled



Poor boy – leaves

moon-viewing

for rice-grinding.



Pg. 37, Lips too Chilled



Interpretation 1:

“Poor boy” a youngster who is poverty stricken and given the arduous task of grinding rice. He is burdened with such duty late at night, “moon-viewing”. He is likely in tattered clothing. “Leaves”, the scene takes place in Autumn and attention is drawn to rust colored crinkly folliage; “moon-viewing” could very well be an Autumn activity. With little leaves remaining on trees and low humidity in the sky, the moon is perfectly available for gazing in the Fall.

Yet no matter the boys rugged placement in the world, he finds relief and joy in the moon-viewing. “Moon-viewing for rice-grinding”. Though he labors he is witness to a majestic show of nature and Tao itself.

He is likely a boy who although is in poverty, he finds pleasure from more simple things in life. He is grateful, did he learn these mannerisms from his family who are also likely impoverished but abundant with inner wealth: love, warmth, and appreciation?

Overall, the scene is endearing, bitter sweet maybe.



Interpretation 2:

“Poor boy” as if spoken by an upper class elderly woman. Not a comment on his wealth statue, rather he is pitied. Entire poem read as,

“Poor boy, he has to leave the moon-viewing part to attend to his rice-grinding. What a shame.”

Contrary to the previous interpretation, this reading could imply the opposite class status on the boy. He is a regal young gentleman out enjoying a royal moon-viewing. But he has to “leave” it, exit the party, to start his chores of grinding the rice.

This kind of scene implies the boy’s dismay at having to work, while some other party viewing boy, probably much older, views his upsettance as a growing pain.





Side Notes:

*I think rice grinding is a process that traditionally happened in the Autumn since it happened after the rice was harvested, which tended to be end of summer. (If my Sakuna memory serves me). This is when they pound the rice with the pestle and mortar?

*Would an upper class person be tasked with work late at night?

September 28, 2020

Shinsuke Honda - Silence

 

 

Shinsuke Honda @ discogs.com 

 

 

 Intoxicated cowboy swaggers amid dustscapes and witnesses passingbys of celebration, climate disasters of varying degrees, and placid ghostly social events.  Inevitably, he rides towards sunset.  Also the cowboy is Nels Cline.

 

For The Golden Star

 

               WOWOWOW what a doozy.  These changes are whacky but thankfully there is a loose pattern to tie them together.

 

 

|| B-  F#7/A#  |  B-    Amaj    |  A min   E7/G#   |  A-      E7/G#   |

|G-    D7/F#    |  G-   Fmaj      |  Bb maj69          |  F#-7b5   B7     ||

 

This bit repeats, but instead ends with 2 full bars of Bbmaj69.

 

||Bbmaj9/D    A7/C#            |  Cmaj69              |  F-7        Bb13       |    Eb maj69         ||

||: Bb-   F7/A   | Bb-    F7/A    |  C-      G7/B         |  D major7              :||

||D maj7         |  Cmaj7/G        |  D maj7              |    F#-                      |

 

|| E minor walk down you know the one that appears in tons of musical literature around the world it’s easier to type this than notate it exactly, resolve to C13, followed by B7b13.  Then back to top. ||

The golden star is dark!  What the heck.  Maybe it is the sun after the earth is destroyed by climate change.

I never know if I notate slash chords correctly.  The note after the    /    is meant to be the bass note.    

Mr. Dark Golden Star uses a lot of normal minor triads and lower clunky voicings.  His Bbmaj 69 is tabbed as follows :  6x5566.  His C major69 is the same shape moved up two frets. 

 

 

 

たそがれ (Tasogare)

 

 

               Tasogare is a lot simpler harmonically than our previous pal.  Opening with the E major hippy jam that pops up every now and then across music.  The voicings are as follows, tabulated :  022100, 044200, 066400.  The first chord is a big happy E major open style, then following shapes are nearly identical, but spreading the index finger out for a little stretch.  All open strings are played.  Strum it like you are summoning the god of peace and joy. 

               At some point Shinsuke Honda does some G#- and F#- triads, and back into the E major.

 

 

 夢夜 (Yumeya)

 

               ||E -           |  E-/ D#                   |       E-/D             |    Cmaj7              |

               |A-7           | D maj                     |   A-7                   |  Dmaj                  | With a transition D# bass note

 

               The C maj7 is our open voicing.

 

 

 

プエノス ホノオ(Buenoshonoo)

 

 

               Opening with a B-9 to B-13 melody thingy.  Approximated xx7779 and then xx7797.

 

               || B-9                      |     Bbmaj6#11                        |  Fmaj7           |     Fmaj7                         ||

              

This is pretty much it.  Buenoshonoo…Bansheenono…Buenoghost…slightly eerie wonderland. 

               The B-9 in form is voiced xx4635, one of those jungled gymnastics to reach the dramatic half step

 

 

 

Winter Space 1226

 

               WINTER. SPACE> VOYAGER TWELVE TWENTY SIX.  PRE-PARE, FOR   .  >> >> >> >> IG N’TION

               Also known as The Horse with No Name.  Open E minor followed by D major with F# in the bass, also sometimes with an open B string.  D major is voiced roughly 200230.  Play around with variations and it will be great.

               Echo echo echo echo snow echo echo.. . . .

 

 

 

夕映え (Yuubae)

 

               Okay we had fun jamming.  Here’s another wonky Nels Cline-esque minor piece.

               Intro is a play of B-9, A-9, G-9 resolve to E major.  It’s that barre shape, so for B-9 xx7779, then move it downwards as needed.

 

               ||Dmaj7 (no3rd)      |  C#7/G#          |  Dmaj7             |  Ddim7         |

               |Dmaj7                      |  C#7/G#          |  D maj7             |  Ddim7         |   (Bar of F#-??)     ||

               |F  maj7                     | E7                    | G-6                    |  Gdim           |

               |F  maj7                     | E7                    | G-6                    |  Gdim           ||

 

               Then he does E major, E minor, D major, D minor, then repeat all.  PLZ mind the form, not sure if I caught all the repeats.

 

 

 

白夜 (Byakuya)

 

               More Nels Voicings !  Opening with A F G C E, on guitar x03010.  A cool F major.  Then A E G B E, X02000, E minor or A minor of some sort.

               Kicking it into high gear we get D majorish and C major7; x54000 and x32000 respectively.  Then an A-9 chord voiced x055000, or AGCBE.

               A crash into our Cmajor 7 open, kind of vague but generally in the C/G tonality.

 

 

朝 (Asa)

 

               Happy Happy E major sunset stuff.  0x6857, same shape as the B-9 from a few songs back.  Followed by A major rain (Amaj9 open voicing) which is x066000, lovely chord. 

               Lots of guitar harmonies (in 3rds I believe) and conversation, there’s a geisha gal singing in the background ! 

               There is a flop to F#-7 for a while before breaking free to E major7, D major 7 on repeat.   

     

                 

                                                        Then back into Sunset paradise.

May 19, 2020

Takashi Kokubo – Healing Music – Bird





Bright yellow sun rise starting new spring, Kokubo treats us not with a mystical, inquisitive or mythological mood.  He gives us a simple, crisp, pure sunny day.




1. Daichi no kokyū II (Breath of the earth II) 


               We are introduced with some subtle Eb #11 happenings before the form ! Then we jump into a loop of:



               ||Bb maj   |  Eb maj      | Ab maj        | Bb maj|
               |Eb  maj     |  Bb maj     |  Ab maj       |  Ab maj / F in the bass||



               This is the gist of what Kokubo is up to.  At times he will throw in a chord inversion, Bb major with D in the bass, Ab major with F in the bass, stuff like that !

               The main theme plays on the major triads; D, F, Bb slide up to C.  Then he repeats the theme up down a whole step, (So, C, Eb, Ab, Bb).




2. Kono michi (This way)



               ||D maj    | B-       | A maj     D maj    |  G maj   A maj    | D maj ||
               ||: G maj   A maj  :||


               On a kalimba perhaps?  Total unaffected innocence.  “Come this way !, follow me !” On a light hearted journey to see a secret bird nest.




3. Nettaiurin no yoake (Daybreak of the tropical rainforest) 


               Tune bops around between C major with a 9 flavor in there, to F major similarly styled.  After a little while A minor and G major fly into the mix.  We get some of that signature Kokubo echo scales JJ.



4. Haru no ogawa (Spring brook)




               Another kalimba jawn ,cool !  Basically G, G major7, C major, C major 7ish descending riff.  First part is as follows, arpeggiated:

               ||G B D G  |  G B D F#  | C E G C   |  C E G C ~B A G ||  Where after the C trails more into a melody.

               Part 2, arpeggiated:
               ||D A G D   |    C B G D    |  B A G D   |   C B G D    ||

               I’m sure Kokubo has a written composition for this, though in my mind he goes off to Jam City, plucking away with all the birds in the world, still in G major the whole time through.




5. Tori no shi • Mori no yoake (Bird poem • Daybreak of the forest)



               ||GCC, B G D |  G maj           |  F  maj  G Maj   |
               | D – 7     E-7   |  Fmaj   G maj |   


               Not sure exactly the harmonic rhythm here, but those are the chords.  Where the notes “GCC” are played together, followed by a melody of B G D.  We’ll see some Gmajor with B in the bass on occasion.  Cool wistful tune, reminds me of Phil Keaggy.

I think it’s that Low D note.



6. Yume (Dream)


               Mega F major 9 arpeggio spread, so cool !  One that I could approximate is voiced C, F, G E!  Mega Light BEAAAAAAAM.  Then we get :


               ||:F major     |  C major / E in the bass   |  D-7 (G7)      |  C major  :|| 


               Where we sometimes get that G7.   Super anime song, totally from the Air (tv) OST.  




7. Finlandia 



               Enjoy the wind harmonies !  !  !  !  (Main theme is very roughly B, A, B, C, then varies from there)




8. Tori no shi • Yūsuzumi (Bird poem • Cool of the evening)


Not sure of harmonic rhythm here , chords are as follows though :
               ||F maj            |  Eb maj                   |  D – 7    |   D  - 7   |
               |F maj 7 #11   |  Cmaj / E in bass   | D – 7     |  D – 7 (G7)  |
               |C maj             ||



               Some C notes flying around the Eb major chord, so that’s cool getting the 6th in there.  Also that final C major is voiced roughly C G A B.  


               Next section Kokubo plays arpeggio heaven.  Roughly voiced C F A E, C F A D (both F major) then some kind of C major harmonies after that. 
              



9. Ōkina sora (Big sky)



               Kokubo’s take on the famous Rick Roll LOL:


               ||: G maj  A  maj   |  F#-  B-    :||  repeat as desired, eventually throw in G major, A major, resolve to D major.


               Other part strolls between G major, A major, B -  , A major.





               Is this the kind of emptiness Buddhists talk about?  Kokubo graces us with purity, clarity, lightness and emptiness rather than weighing us down with heavy musics.  Light as a feather , Birds flock together  , it is Kokubo’s “Healing Music – Bird”