Warabe uta
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Warabe uta (童歌?) are traditional Japanese songs, similar to nursery rhymes. They are often sung as part of traditional children's games. They are described as a form of min'yo - traditional Japanese songs, usually sung without accompanying instruments.
The centuries-old lyrics are often incomprehensible to modern Japanese (especially to children who are singing it), while others can actually be quite sinister on close analysis. Like a lot of children's songs around the world, because people are used to them from an early age, they are often oblivious to the real meanings.
[edit] Examples of Warabe uta
[edit] Tōryanse
An example would be a warabe-uta known as "Tōryanse". It is often played as electronic tunes at Japanese pedestrian crossings to signal when it is safe to cross.
Japanese:
ちっと通して 下しゃんせ
この子の七つの お祝いに
こわいながらも |
Romaji:
Chitto tōshite kudashanse
Kono ko no nanatsu no oiwai ni
Kowai nagara mo |
Translation:
Please allow me to pass through
To celebrate this child's 7th birthday
It's scary but |
(When infant mortality was high, people traditionally celebrated when a child survived to reach the age of 7. See Shichigosan)
This particular warabe-uta is sung as part of a traditional game identical to "London Bridge Is Falling Down". Two children facing each other link their hands to form an arch 'checkpoint', and the remaining children walk through underneath in a line (and back round again in circles). The child who happens to be under the arch when the song finishes is then 'caught'.
The tune being played at Japanese pedestrian crossings is an analogy to this game i.e. it is safe to cross until the music stops.
[edit] Teru-teru-bōzu
A teru teru bōzu is a little traditional hand-made doll which supposedly brings sunshine. "Teru" is a Japanese verb which describes sunshine, and a "bōzu" is a buddhist monk. Children make teru-teru-bōzu out of tissue paper and a string and hang them from a window to wish for sunny weather. There is a famous warabe-uta which is about these little cute ghosts which you can see hanging everywhere on rainy days.
Japanese: |
Romaji: |
Translation: |
The lyrics are allegedly about a story of a monk who promised farmers to stop rain and bring clear weather during a prolonged period of rain which was ruining crops. When the monk failed to bring sunshine, he was executed.