Chūgoku Region Lullaby
Chugoku Region Lullaby (Japanese: 中国地方の子守唄 or chūgoku chihō no komoriuta) is a traditional folk song in Okayama Prefecture, Chugoku region, Japan, and is a well known Japanese cradle song.
General
Chugoku Region Lullaby is a traditional folk song in the city of Ibara, Okayama Prefecture, Chugoku region, Japan, and is a well known Japanese cradle song. It is best known by the arrangement by Kosaku Yamada that was made in 1938.[1]
An instrumental version, played on a harp, historically marked the end of transmission at night on RCC, broadcasting to Hiroshima Prefecture. Up until 1987, a violin version was used on Sanyo Broadcasting, in Okayama and Kagawa, also signalling the end of daily programming. During the shutdown of analog television in Japan on 24 July 2011, RCC played the song for the final time on the station's analog signal shortly before the station switched off its analog transmitters.
Lyrics
Japaneseねんねこ しゃっしゃりませ
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Romanized JapaneseNenneko shasshari mase,
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English translationHushabye, sleep!
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See also
- Lullaby
- Folk song
- Other Japanese lullabies: Edo Lullaby, Itsuki Lullaby, Takeda Lullaby, etc.
References
- Chugoku Chiho no komoriuta Archived 2009-08-19 at the Wayback Machine (Its story, lyrics and music score)
External links
- Chugoku Region Lullaby (A men's chorus, YouTube)
- Region Lullaby (Played by the Japanese zither, YouTube)