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(1931–2001) was a taiko performer and founder of the group Ondekoza. ==Biography== Den was born in Asakusa district of Tokyo in 1931. Den's birth name was . His hometown was subjected to American airbomb raids in 1945, though he and his family were able to move south to his mother's home in Kagoshima before they were attacked. At the conclusion of World War II, Den returned to Tokyo and began high school, which he completed in 1952. While in high school, Den organized a strike that resulted in the removal of the school principal. Den suspected this organizing experience was one factor that allowed him to enroll into Waseda University that was governed by a leftist student organization. While Den studied Chinese literature there, he also had considerable involvement in several violent demonstrations in 1952.〔 Consequently, Den was dismissed from Waseda. Den fled from Tokyo to escape possible arrest for his activities and worked as a laborer in a Kobe port. He had also traveled to Germany after working for about six months, but Den was reportedly unimpressed and subjected to racial harassment. In 1958, Den went to Sado Island for the first time. Den became familiar with a local style of taiko performance on the island called ''ondeko'' during his stay. He left the island after six months, but returned to the island in 1968 with his family with the intention of living there. Den died in 2001. His last words, according to a performer in Ondekoza, translated to, "We’re going to go with Ondekoza of Mount Fuji," referring to the decision to move the group from Sado Island to the city of Fuji in Shizuoka prefecture, and rename it accordingly. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Den Tagayasu」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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