Thomas Alexander Kolbe
@thomas@social.srvr.life
Composer working with electronic music. Research on music, neuroscience, psychology. Based in Nagoya, Moriyama Ward, Japan. 電子音楽を扱う作曲家。 音楽・神経科学・心理学に関する研究。 日本・名古屋市守山区在住。
social.srvr.life
Thomas Alexander Kolbe
@thomas@social.srvr.life
Composer working with electronic music. Research on music, neuroscience, psychology. Based in Nagoya, Moriyama Ward, Japan. 電子音楽を扱う作曲家。 音楽・神経科学・心理学に関する研究。 日本・名古屋市守山区在住。
social.srvr.life
@thomas@social.srvr.life
·
Feb 25, 2026
Japan’s musical traditions do not exist in isolation. Many of their early foundations developed through sustained contact with cultural currents from China and Korea.
In an essay I published last summer, I looked at these transregional connections and the historical processes that shaped Japanese music up to 794 CE, before the consolidation of court-centered musical systems. Rather than treating musical traditions as fixed or purely national categories, the text focuses on transmission, adaptation, and the limits of retrospective classification.
The essay discusses early forms of musical exchange, the movement of instruments, modes, and practices, and the broader cultural and political conditions under which these influences were absorbed and transformed. It also reflects on how later historiography tends to simplify or homogenize these processes, often overlooking their layered and contingent nature.
If you are interested in early Japanese music, East Asian cultural history, or the question of how traditions take form through contact rather than isolation, you may find the essay useful.
https://tomkolbe.com/2025/08/11/before-the-court-korean-and-chinese-currents-in-japanese-music-up-to-794-ce/
#MusicHistory #JapaneseMusic #EastAsianHistory #CulturalExchange #MusicResearch
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