A lake of southern Honshu, Japan, west of Nagoya. It is the largest lake in the country and a popular scenic resort area.
Dictionary:
Bi·wa (bē'wä) ![]() |
| Music Encyclopedia: Biwa |
A pear-shaped Japanese lute, usually with four or five strings; it is held horizontally and plucked with a plectrum in an arpeggiated manner. It was brought from China to Japan in the late 7th century with other instruments of Gagaku (court music), in which it is the bass instrument. Used in many strata of Japanese society, it is played solo, in the court ensemble and as accompaniment for Buddhist music and various forms of narrative.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Biwa |
| Wikipedia: Biwa |
The biwa (琵琶) is a Japanese short-necked fretted lute, and a close variant of the Chinese pipa. The biwa is the chosen instrument of Benten, goddess of music, eloquence, poetry, and education in Japanese Shinto.
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The biwa derives from a Chinese lute called pipa, which itself derives from a Persian/Middle Eastern lute called barbat (whose modern descendant in Arabic regions is called oud). The biwa reached Japan from China during the Nara Period (710-759 AD), and five instruments from that time are kept in the Shōsōin, the national treasure house of Japan. One of them, a rare, five-stringed gogenbiwa (五玄琵琶), is decorated with Central Asian themes, including a camel. This instrument is literally one of its kind in Asia, being the only one preserved from the period, although similar instruments are manufactured in small numbers today. Wandering biwa players, similar to minstrels, were known as biwa hōshi (琵琶法師).
The playing of the biwa nearly became extinct during the Meiji period as Western music and instruments became popular.
There are seven types of biwa, chacterized by number of strings, sounds it could produce, type of plectrum, and their use. As the biwa does not play in tempered tuning, pitches are approximated to the nearest note.
Although the biwa has been little used in popular music, the Japanese progressive rock band Paikappu used it in the 1980s, and the Japanese American pop music group Rin' has used it since 2003.
| Traditional Japanese musical instruments | ||
|---|---|---|
| String | Plucked | Biwa · Ichigenkin · Koto · Kugo · Sanshin · Shamisen · Yamatogoto · Tonkori |
| Bowed | Kokyū | |
| Wind | Flutes | Hotchiku · Nohkan · Ryūteki · Kagurabue · Komabue · Shakuhachi · Shinobue · Yokobue · Tsuchibue |
| Oboes | Hichiriki | |
| Free-reed pipes | Shō · U | |
| Horns | Horagai | |
| Percussion | Drums | Kakko · Taiko · (Ōtsuzumi · Shime-daiko · Tsuzumi) · Tsuri-daiko · Ikko · San-no-tsuzumi · Den-den daiko |
| Blocks | Hyōshigi · Mokugyo · Sasara · (Ita-sasara · Binzasara) · Kokiriko · Shakubyoshi | |
| Gongs | ||
| Others | Mukkuri · Koukin | |
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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