- and they
instead became known for
their imayō songs. In
combination with
receiving gifts for ****ual favors,
imayō became the
source of
wealth for asobi...
- 12th-century ****anese
female puppeteer, prostitute, and
imayō-style singer. She
taught imayō to Otomae, who in turn
taught Emperor Goshirakawa. May J...
-
poetry appeared.
First a new
lyrical form
called imayō (今様,
modern style, a form of ryūkōka) emerged.
Imayō consists of four
lines in 8–5 (or 7–5) syllables...
-
repertoire of the
Chinese court.
During the
Heian period, a
gagaku form
known as
imayō (今様,
literally modern style)
became po****r. In this form,
poems would be...
-
reading of hayariuta, used for
commercial music of Edo Period. Therefore,
imayō,
which was
promoted by
Emperor Go-Shirakawa in the
Heian period, was a kind...
- jūni shi
series The Sign of the Ox Gentō
shashin kurabe series Kanjinchō
Imayō tōkyō
hakkei series Evening bell at
Asakusa Nijūshi Kō
Mitate E
Awase series...
-
excessively patronizing literature and religion,
being an avid
collector of
imayo poetry since his youth, with
these poems often being focused on Buddhist...
-
Shrine (御香宮神社), in Kyoto. The
music used in this song was from
Chikuzen Imayō (****anese: 筑前今様), a
vocal genre sung by the
bushi of ****uoka
Domain during...
-
white suikan robe they wore, or
alternatively the hyōshi (拍子)
rhythm of the
imayō (今様, lit. 'trendy')
songs that they sang and
danced to,
which were also...
-
realized until several decades later. In 1752, Jōkanbō Kōa (静観房好阿)
wrote Imayō Heta
Dangi (当世下手談義, "A
Clumsy Sermon in the
Modern Manner"),
which is identified...