Takahashi Chikuzan
50 top tracks
Takahashi Chikuzan
50 top tracks
Albums

津軽三味線
Takahashi Chikuzan

高橋竹山 津軽の魂
Takahashi Chikuzan

Tsugaru-shamisen
Takahashi Chikuzan

決定版 高橋竹山
Takahashi Chikuzan

津軽三味線・決定盤
Takahashi Chikuzan

高橋竹山の魂
Takahashi Chikuzan

津軽三味線・高橋竹山の世界
Takahashi Chikuzan

津軽の響き
Takahashi Chikuzan

津軽三味線 決定版
Takahashi Chikuzan

源流 津軽三味線
Takahashi Chikuzan

ハイ・サウンド
Takahashi Chikuzan

津軽三味線大競演・高橋竹山から吉田兄弟まで・
Takahashi Chikuzan
Biography
Takahashi Chikuzan (高橋竹山)(born Takahashi Sadazō in 1910, died 1998) was a renowned Japanese Tsugaru-shamisen performer and composer....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Takahashi Chikuzan (高橋竹山)(born Takahashi Sadazō in 1910, died 1998) was a renowned Japanese Tsugaru-shamisen performer and composer.
He was born in Kominato, a village that is part of the Hiranai township in Aomori prefecture. He lost his sight at around age two from measles before becoming a live-in apprentice of the Tsugaru-jamisen performer Toda Jūjirō near his home town. Before World War II he spent many years touring the Aomori and surrounding countryside, playing before doorsteps and making money any way he could. After the war he became more widely known, first as an accompanist for the famous Tsugaru folk song singer Narita Unchiku (who named him "Chikuzan"), and subsequently as a solo performer of the Tsugaru-jamisen repertory. His performances, for many years taking place regularly at a small venue called "Jan-jan" in Shibuya Ward of Tokyo, often featured long solo improvisations, which he entitled "Iwaki" after the tallest mountain in Tsugaru.
His most famous disciple, a woman who has assumed the name Takahashi Chikuzan II, continues to perform versions of Takahashi Chikuzan's repertory. Takahashi Chikuzan I made a huge number of recordings, some of which are still in print today. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/+noredirect/TAKAHASHI+Chikuzan">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
