Rokuro-Kubi of Ayakashi. Japanese traditional and contemporary music and ukiyoe of yokai.

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 ก.ย. 2021
  • A movie of yokai paintings and music by Shinji Yamashina.
    Using traditional Japanese instruments such as the taiko drum, shinobue flute, and shakuhachi (bamboo flute), as well as piano and flute, Yamashina creates a unique world of yokai using his own drawings of yokai set to traditional and contemporary music.
    Recommended for those interested in Japanese yokai, ghosts, ethnicity, and culture.
    Please enjoy the world of yokai, which is depicted beautifully, suspiciously, sometimes humorously, and sometimes terrifyingly.
    Please subscribe to my channel Shinji Yamashina MUSIC.
    NOTES===
    Monsters whose faces are separated from their bodies exist all over the world. Starting with Ireland's Dullahan, who wanders around on horseback with his head under his arm, there are also monsters in Malaysia and South America.
    The representative of Japan is the Rokurokubi.
    The word "kubi" means neck, and the meaning of "rokuro" is unknown even to the Japanese. Many Rokurokubi is women. At night, women's necks grow long. Various theories include licking the oil from an andon (Japanese lantern) or suck the life out of men.
    There are also other yokai whose body parts are long, such as long arms and long legs, but Rurokubi is the most popular and well-known.
    It is not so much what the Rurokubi do. Still, the exciting and creepy appearance of a beautiful woman's neck growing out made the Japanese of the Edo period so fond of the Rokurokubi.
    There is also a theory that when the neck is extended, the person is unaware of it, so perhaps the Rokurokubi is unaware that she is a yokai. You may find that your neck is growing while you sleep.
  • ภาพยนตร์และแอนิเมชัน

ความคิดเห็น • 1