Jūshichi-gen

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Jūshichi-gen (十七絃 or 十七弦, lit. "seventeen strings") is a traditional Japanese musical instrument, a zither with seventeen strings. It is a variant of the koto, which traditionally has thirteen strings.

Also known as jūshichi-gensō (十七絃箏), or "seventeen-stringed koto." The jūshichi-gen was invented in 1921 by Michiko Miyagi, a musician who felt that the standard koto lacked the range she sought. Her seventeen-stringed creation, sometimes described as a "bass koto", has a deeper sound and requires specialized plectra (picks worn attached to the player's fingers with which the strings are plucked). Though her original jūshichi-gen was considerably larger than a normal koto, seventeen-stringed koto of a normal koto size are more common today; these presumably do not have as deep a sound.

Though Miyagi also invented an 80-string koto, and a short koto, these did not catch on and spread as the jūshichi-gen did. It is still used today in various forms of traditional music, and the members of the Japanese band Rin' are among those who use the instrument in modern popular music.

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  • This article is largely derived from the corresponding article on the Japanese Wikipedia.
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