Documentary / Japan
Toyoko Sawamura – Shamisen Player
Toyoko was born in Fukuoka and was made famous through her radio appearances. Upon discovering her natural talent for music, Sessyu Tsukuda, a rokyoku performer visiting Kyushu, invited Toyoko to become a shamisen player for the rokyoku theatre in Tokyo. There, she studied under Tsuyako Yamamoto. After finishing her apprenticeship, she attended rokyoku classes organized by Tadashi Kunitomo and performed as a shamisen player for him for almost three decades. The late Takeharu Kunimoto, Toyoko’s artistic partner from 2001 to 2015, praised her for improvisational technique and depth of expression. Currently, she plays for Nanafuku Tamagawa and many other performers. She is one of the greatest master shamisen players in the history of rokyoku.
Direction, filmed and edited by
Atiqa Kawakami
Atiqa was born in Yokohama. Her first documentary film Pilgrimage told the story of Mitsuo Futatsuki, a Japanese American Nisei revisiting the site of the concentration camp where he was held during World War Ⅱ. This film, which she released under the name Noriko Kawakami, was awarded the Kirin Art Award in 2001. In 2015, her documentary film Minatoya Koryu In-Tune, which introduces audiences to one of the greatest living female rokyoku performers, was released in theaters. Currently, as a director and as a producer, she is working on various projects including “Provoke”, a film about the poet, singer, and painter artist Kazuki Tomokawa, and “Hibiki” with the French filmmaker Vincent Moon. (http://hibikiproject.com/)
Acoustics engineered by
Takaaki Yamamoto
Takaaki was born in Shizuoka and has had a prolific career as a sound technician and sound engineer. His previous work includes Masanori Tominaga’s “Vengeance Can Wait and Rolling”, Tetsuaki Matsue’s “Live Tape” and “Flashback Memories 3D”, Yu Irie’s “SR: Saitama no Rapper” series, Michio Koshikawa’s “Areno”, and Koji Shiraishi’s “Vauxhall Rideshow”.