Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Please introduce some traditional Japanese songs.
Please introduce some traditional Japanese songs.
You will find this song familiar as soon as you listen to it.
Comparable to KINOMOTO SAKURA.
Takeda lullaby (Japanese: Takeda Tian Bai Shou) is a folk song that spreads in Takeda Village, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan, and is often used as the material of Japanese national music and pop music.
In the Chinese world, the most famous Chinese adaptation is Weng Qianyu's Prayer, which has been covered many times.
Takeda lullaby was once sung by tribesmen in Kyoto and Osaka, and was selected as a group song by Tribal Liberation Alliance in1960s. This song is an episode of the film (1969- 1970 version) adapted from the novel "River without Bridge" (biography of Qiao) which reflects the life of tribal people.
1969, the folk singing group "Hong Niao" adapted this folk song into a popular song, which was included in its single CD released in 197 1 year, and sold about 65,438+10,000 copies in three years. This song was banned by NHK and other Japanese broadcasting networks because it was related to the tribal people's movement, but it was released in1990s.
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