OKI: Music of the Ainu
OKI: Music of the Ainu
Oki Kano, known professionally as OKI, is a leading musician of Ainu music—the music of Japan’s northernmost indigenous people. Current students can purchase $26 tickets with code STU25.
$26-$31
Japan Society
May 06, 2022 | 7:30 pm
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Performance details

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Location

Japan Society
333 E 47th St
New York, NY

About The Performance

Oki Kano, known professionally as OKI, is a leading musician of Ainu music—the music of Japan’s northernmost indigenous people. Born to a Japanese mother and an Ainu father, OKI has recovered and recreated traditional music on the tonkori, a stringed instrument of the Ainu people of Karafuto (a region also known as Sakhalin). The rich, reverberating twang of the tonkori strings, which are traditionally made from deer tendons, allowed Ainu shamans to communicate with spirits that control the wind, rain and other natural phenomena called kamuy. In this program, OKI performs solo pieces as well as contemporary works with his band members from their new album, Tonkori in the Moonlight, released in January 2022. 

Image: OKI / photo by Ishida Masataka