Misplaced Pages

Horagai

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Japanese conch shells used as trumpets See also: Conch (instrument)
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Horagai" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Japanese horagai, a conch shell used for religious purposes or as a signal for samurai

Horagai () (or jinkai ) are large conch shells, usually from Charonia tritonis, that have been used as trumpets in Japan for many centuries. The instrument, which has served a number of purposes throughout Japanese history, has been given a number of Japanese names depending on its function. Special schools still teach students to play the traditional music associated with the conch.

Instrument

Unlike most shell trumpets from other parts of the world which produce only one pitch, the Japanese hora or horagai can produce three or five different notes. The different pitches are achieved using a bronze or wooden mouthpiece attached to the apex of the shell's spire. At freezing temperatures (often encountered in the mountainous regions of Japan) the lips may freeze to the metal surface, so wooden or bamboo mouthpieces are used.

Horagai being used in a Shugendō ceremony, 2016

Historical usage

Religion

The conch is used by Buddhist monks for religious purposes. Its use goes back at least 1,000 years, and it is still used today for some rituals, such as the omizutori (water drawing) portion of the Shuni-e rites at the Tōdai-ji in Nara. Each Shugendō school has his own conch shell melodies.

The hora is especially associated with the Yamabushi, ascetic warrior monks of the Shugendō tradition. The yamabushi used the trumpet to signal their presence (or movements) to one another across mountains and to accompany the chanting of sutras.

Military

In war, the shell, called jinkai, or "war shell", was one of several signal devices used by Japanese feudal warriors known as samurai. A large conch would be used and fitted with a bronze (or wooden) mouthpiece. It would be held in an openwork basket and blown with a different combination of "notes" to signal troops to attack, withdraw, or change strategies, in the same way a bugle or flugelhorn was used in the west. The trumpeter was called a kai yaku ().

The jinkai served a similar function to drums and bells in signaling troop formations, setting a rhythm for marching, providing something of a heroic accompaniment to encourage the troops and confusing the enemy by inferring that the troop numbers were large enough to require such trumpeters. Many daimyōs (feudal lords) enlisted yamabushi to serve as kai yaku, due to their experience with the instrument.

The sound of jinkai is often used in motion pictures and television dramas as a symbolic sound effect indicating an impending battle, e.g., The Last Samurai or the 2007 Taiga drama Fūrinkazan, but both of these screen renditions use deep, resonating monotones, not the melodic tones that yamabushi used for relaying messages.

See also

References

  1. Warriors of Medieval Japan, Stephen Turnbull, Osprey Publishing, 2007 P.106
  • Clark, Mitchell (2005). Sounds of the Silk Road: Musical Instruments of Asia. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts Publications.
  • Turnbull, Stephen (2002). War in Japan: 1467–1615. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.

External links

Natural horns and trumpets
Traditional Japanese musical instruments
String
Plucked
Bowed
Wind
Flutes and
oboes
Free-reed
pipes
Horns
Percussion
Drums
Blocks
Gongs
Others
Japanese weapons, armour and equipment
Swords
Construction
Knives and daggers
Polearms and spears
Practice weapons
Armour
Types
Clothing
Samurai accoutrements
Chain and rope weapons
Clubs and truncheons
Staff weapons
Projectile and throwing weapons
Firearms and guns
Improvised and other weapons
Signal devices
Users
Categories: