- The
Komusō (虚無僧) ("priest of nothingness" or "monk of emptiness") were
wandering non-monastic lay
Buddhists from the warrior-class (samurai and rōnin)...
- are
generally left more
intact than
those of a shakuhachi,
though older komuso shakuhachi also
share this trait. Together,
these characteristics make for...
-
notable for
their role in the ****e sect of Zen
Buddhist monks,
known as
komusō ("priests of nothingness" or "emptiness monks"), who used the shakuhachi...
- and
allowing him to
travel undistracted on his journey.
Tengai (天蓋): (see
komusō)
Torioigasa (鳥追笠): a
folded kasa,
famously worn for the Awa
Dance Festival...
- teacher, and craftsman. Like his teacher,
Kyochiku Tani,
Nishimura became a
komusō (a
mendicant shakuhachi player).
Nishimura wandered ****an as a mendicant...
- (1968-2016), ****anese
musician and
record producer Kinko Kurosawa (1710–1771),
komusō and
music collector Kowloon Kurosawa (born 1971),
essayist and nonfiction...
-
ninja to spy in
enemy buildings without rousing su****ion.
Disguises as a
komusō, a
mendicant monk
known for
playing the shakuhachi, were also effective...
- of
Linji (J. Rinzai-roku 臨剤録). ****e was used to
create a
legend for the
komusō samurai-monks that
appeared in Edo-period ****an. They used
their self-named...
- ****anese Zen
monks called Komuso.
Komuso temples were
abolished in 1871, but
their honkyoku music remains po****r in
modern ****an.
Komuso pla****
honkyoku as...
-
September 2021,
retrieved 11 June 2024
Tsuge Gen'ichi (2016). "Sakura".
komuso.com.
International Shakuhachi Society.
Archived from the
original on 15...