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Holehole bushi
Work Song by Japanese Immigrants to Hawai¡Æi


Date: July 22 (Wed), 6:30p.m.
Venue: Sogetsu Hall [ > map]
Ticket: ¥ 4,000, free seating


From Hiroshima, Yamaguchi, Okinawa or other regions, many Japanese immigrated to Hawai¡Æi to work on sugarcane fields. Their folksong Holehole bushi was born from their feelings and the memories of home. A revival of the immigrant¡Çs soul!
 









Franklin Odo (lecturer)
Alison Arakawa (Holehole bushi)
Soul Flower Mononoke Summit
Tetsuhiro Daiku (song, sangen)
Naeko Daiku (song)
Makoto Kubota (guitar, bass)
Rocket Matsu (keyboard, accordion, mandolin)
Masami Hattori (Brazilian percussion)




Part 1 : Lecture and Demonstrations of Holehole bushi
- Lecture :
¡ÈFolksongs -holehole bushi -from Japanese immigrants on Hawaii Sugar Plantations"
Lecturer: Franklin Odo (Smithsonian Institute Asian Pacific American Program Director)
- Holehole bushi demonstration by Alison Arakawa


Part 2 : Tetsuhiro Daiku sings the Japanese immigrants songs


Part 3 : Soul Flower Mononoke Summit Live Performance - Japanese work songs

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¥ 4,000, free seating



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