Hot on the heels of a series of performances by a well-known Korean percussion group come three weeks of demonic Nipponese drumming fury. Japan's foremost Taiko ensemble, Ondekoza, will take to stages across the nation on what already looks set to be a hugely successful tour.
While it will be another week before members of the troupe even arrive in Taiwan, organizers have already been forced to arrange for an additional Taipei performance after tickets for the group's July 17 and July 18 shows sold out in record time.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF NEW ASPECT
Although it's the famed Kodo Taiko troupe that continues to take much of the credit for bringing the ancient Japanese drumming art to global audiences, it is in fact the Ondekoza ensemble that should be given an ovation for Taiko revivalism and the popularization of the ancient folk art. Formed by folk art enthusiast Tagayas Den in 1969, Ondekoza was one the first of the new generation of groups to transform Taiko from a performance art into a way of life. Although there are now reportedly upwards of 8,000 Taiko groups in Japan, Den's Ondekoza remains one of the most well-respected and followed of all these groups.
While Ondekoza is better known for its drumming prowess, the group's strict training regime, which includes a daily marathon, has also led to the troupe becoming equally well-known for the offbeat way in which its members arrive at concerts.
There was no need for a tour bus when the troupe first traveled to the US in 1975, as it's members amazed on-lookers, when, after completing the Boston Marathon they immediately took to the stage. Nor was a bus needed when the troupe returned to the US 15 years later. Over a period of 1,071 days the troupe performed 355 concerts, traveling to each location on foot and covering a staggering 14,910km. During the troupe's mammoth 1998 tour of China, its members ran from venue to venue covering a distance of 12,500km.
For the group's Taiwan concerts however, a tour bus has been included due to time constraints. Not that this has deterred Den's hard-drumming acolytes from taking to the streets while in Taiwan. On July 14, the troupe will be donning their running shoes and taking part in the Kaohsiung City marathon, after which they will give a small performance.
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