My grandfather was in okinawa during WWII, he wasnt fighting though, and he said he saw a wallet in a cherry tree, nobody took it….until the day he died he always respected thr japanese’s honesty
I really love Edo and Meiji period, a great middle between old and modern Japan. So peaceful and clever.
I wish i could travel to Japan. admire their rich history & art they present even the craftsmanship they made by hand.
I have horrible anxiety, and listening to chinese, korean and japanese traditional music just brings a calm to me, it's like all the worries are being washed away by some sort of river or waterfall.. It's like I'm in the past, chilling with the salmon fish in the water while i wash my silly little kimono in the river
My great great great great grandfather supposedly was a dutch merchant who came to Japan during the edo period (probably the 1790s)
Haru no umi is from 1929
Beautiful country, culture, music, people, everything, in love with Japan❤
Planning for my second trip to Japan in November right now...
I used this to study, thank u so much!! 🗾
Learning hiragana and listening to this in background is another level experience..
I play this while learning Japanese. Very relaxing. I am about a year and a half in, everyday study. One of the most rewarding things Ive ever done and I am so proud.
Man, what a trip! Beautiful music and amazing performances! Rocking strings in the Edo Period full-on! Thanks for posting this!
きれいね〜😍
私は日本人の誇り高い孫です😊
17:08 is from the game Okami. Beautiful soundtrack ❤
すばらしい!日本の音楽は本当に私の心の特定の場所に響きます Translation: "dismahshi"
This picture is "Gifts of the Ebb Tide" drawn by Kitagawa Utamaro in 1789.
My great great grandfather was born in an island Furokuto above Japan. The coolest North East Pacific Island. I’m proud to be Pacific Islander of North East Asia.
my great great great grandmother was playing this music. when she was hitting the studio to record this, peasants and the emperor were waiting with excitement for the new tape to come out... such a miracle we can listen to this awe-inspiring music here, on youtube, centuries later.
@Jirusandoicchi