Tuesday, July 20, 2010

突風、行くぞ!

7/18/10

Today has been absolutely amazing. I realize that I’ve barely updated this blog since arriving in Nagasaki, and that’s mostly due to the fact that Nagasaki isn’t very interesting after the first two months. By then, you’ve been to all the famous places and tried all the local food and been to all the major shopping centers, which doesn’t leave much for the last two months. Yet somehow I’ve managed to keep myself going and I credit that to yosakoi.

Let me take you back to mid-April to the time of one of my previous blog posts. It was a cool spring morning when I arrived at Nagasaki Station to meet some other people from the JASIN program to go to the penguin aquarium. When I got to the station, I heard loud music and shouts, so I went to investigate. I stood on the terrace overlooking the plaza and gazed down as a group of men and women dressed in flowing blue clothes danced before an audience as another man waved a large blue flag behind them.

I later learned that this form of dance was called yosakoi.

Fast forward a few hours to where Nagasaki University’s team performed. Even though this had only been my first day of experiencing yosakoi, I knew from the start that they were something special. None of the other teams had their energy or level of genki-ness. I remember standing in awe of them more than any of the other teams. At the time, I didn’t realize that they were Nagasaki University’s team, however.

Fast forward two more weeks: The girls who watched the yosakoi festival with me and I decided that we wanted to learn some yosakoi, but GaiDai, the school we’re studying at, doesn’t have a team. That didn’t stop us though, as we’d heard that lots of GaiDai students joined clubs at Nagasaki University, which was closer to the heart of the city. So we went to the university to find the billboard with the club’s information. Imagine our surprise when the billboard depicted a boy wearing the same uniform as the team that had completely blown us away. This was 突風 (とっぷう, toppuu), Nagasaki University’s yosakoi team. Now is when the nervousness sets in. This team was supposed to be number one in Kyuushuu. Would they be willing to let a group of foreigners on their team?

Fast forward another week or so: I have emailed the girls’ captain of the team and we will be observing a practice the following week. We go to the practice and watch, making our final decision that we want to join them if they will have us. Now is when three months of dance practice commences.

Fast forward to this morning. I woke up at five o’clock so my host dad could drive me and one of my friends to Nagasaki University’s campus. Clad in my uniform pants and a tank top and a bag filled with my tabi shoes, arm bands, naruko, and a happi and apron borrowed from a senpai (club senior) in my hand, I met with the rest of the team and we got on three buses and drove to Greenland, an amusement park in another prefecture.

Why were we up so early, and why were we going to a theme park? Today was the tenth anniversary of the Sanoyoi Fire Carnival; a yosakoi festival. We were scheduled to perform three times that day despite the sweltering heat that left us sweating buckets (Luckily, we were constantly provided with bottled tea and a Japanese sports drink called Aquarius). My hair was styled into lop-sided pigtails so I could match the outrageously teased and styled hair of the other girls before we went out and gave our first performance in front of a shopping center. Aside from my own mistake of standing in the wrong spot for the final pose, we hit the mark with each move.

From my understanding, in yosakoi festivals, there is a competition among the groups that perform original dances. There is a set of yosakoi dances that most people seem to know, and then there are the original dances created by each group that performs. Toppuu’s dance is called 「色」(いろ、iro), which means “color.” They chose fireworks as the theme for the dance, and it shows through the dancers’ energy and the sudden bursts of power throughout the dance.

We performed two more times: Once at the main stage of the park and once at another large stage called the Rainbow Dome. After our last performance, the boys’ captain gave us a rousing speech about how proud he was of us and the hard work we had put into each performance and each practice before it. Then we played the waiting game. As a group, we sat on a patch of grass near the main stage and watched the last few dances before the officials announced the winners of the competition. We waited with baited breath, some of the girls had their eyes squeezed shut and their hands clasped together as though in prayer as we waited for them to make the announcement.

There was a pause.

And then the first few notes of 「色」were played.

There were screams of joy as we jumped up and cheered and hugged each other. Tears of “happy water” streamed from the faces of the Japanese members as us foreigners high-fived and hugged as many people as possible. We had won, and Toppu had maintained its reputation as the best in Kyuushuu. We then made our way down to the main stage to perform one last time for the audience, moving in and getting as close to them as possible during the free dance sections. Toppuu’s energy is too powerful for words. As I performed with them, shouting out to the audience and getting down low to the ground before springing back up, I felt alive and like I was part of something powerful that could inspire others to get up and dance along with us. This moment has made all the monotony of GaiDai and Nagasaki worth going through.

After our final performance, all of the teams were invited onto the main stage to dance some of the commonly known dances together. There was one dance that no one really seemed to know, and then we gave two performances of “Freedom,” the first dance that we learned after joining Toppuu. Once the dance was over, we made our way back to the buses and loaded up together before heading back to the university. As we were piling up into the buses and pulling out of the driveway, fireworks lit up the sky in loud pops and bright, shimmering colors; an appropriate end to a long day, I felt. And so it is with a sun-burned face and tired legs that I will sleep soundly with a wide smile on my face.

「突風」(Toppuu) means “gale” or “strong wind,” and the team lives up to their name. They display their strength in their dances with a force that could blow away the fiercest storm. And with those storm clouds cleared away, there will be nothing left to do but set off fire works.

突風: We will blow you away and light up your sky in a thousand colors.

You can watch our performance here.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Sweetie,

    You are such a great writer, so vivid and alive. I wish you'd write more often. You've had such a wonderful cultural immersion experience. I hope America isn't too boring!

    Just 9 more days and yes, I'm counting!

    Love,

    Your Mama

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