My knowledge about these matters doesn’t go much further than a quick Google search but this might be useful.
I am sure Mr Iwamoto was a competent player, and yes, traditional music has much smaller market, but more than that, traditional art, including music, in Japan is (I maybe out of date, so don’t quote me) very much a sectarian world which involves complex and strict social protocols you are expected to observe. So if you just want to learn and play the instrument, it may not be the best place to be in.
But we’d better get back to opera. As for that I really did not like the production in which King and Queen are living in a semi-detached and a ‘common’ woman raging because her step-son prefers a young girl.
I am sure Mr Iwamoto was a competent player, and yes, traditional music has much smaller market, but more than that, traditional art, including music, in Japan is (I maybe out of date, so don’t quote me) very much a sectarian world which involves complex and strict social protocols you are expected to observe. So if you just want to learn and play the instrument, it may not be the best place to be in.
But we’d better get back to opera. As for that I really did not like the production in which King and Queen are living in a semi-detached and a ‘common’ woman raging because her step-son prefers a young girl.
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