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・ Hiromichi Watanabe
・ Hiromichi Yahara
・ Hiromitsu
・ Hiromitsu Agatsuma
・ Hiromitsu Horiike
・ Hiromitsu Isogai
・ Hiromitsu Kadota
・ Hiromitsu Kanehara
・ Hiromitsu Kitayama
・ Hiromitsu Miura
・ Hiromitsu Ochiai
・ Hiromitsu Takahashi
・ Hiromitsu Takeda (artist)
・ Hiromix
・ Hiromori
Hiromori Hayashi
・ Hiromori Kawashima
・ Hiromoto Okubo
・ Hiromu
・ Hiromu Arakawa
・ Hiromu Matsuoka
・ Hiromu Naruse
・ Hiromu Nonaka
・ Hiromu Ono
・ Hiromu Shinozuka
・ Hiromu Takahashi
・ Hiron
・ Hirona Yamazaki
・ Hironaga
・ Hironaka


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Hiromori Hayashi : ウィキペディア英語版
Hiromori Hayashi
Hiromori Hayashi (28 December 1831〔Sources give 1821, 1830, and 1831.〕 – 5 March 1896〔Some sources give 1886.〕)〔Dates given are published in the Library of Congress catalog.〕 was a Japanese composer credited with composing the Japanese national anthem "Kimigayo".
==Life and career==

He held several positions in the royal court starting in his youth. He moved to Tokyo after the Meiji Restoration and in 1875 helped carry out 1875 orders to fuse Western musical theory with Japanese theory. The final version of the anthem was first played for Emperor Meiji for his birthday, on 3 November 1880.〔Chizuko Izawa, Nobuo Ohta (2005). ''Human learning and memory: advances in theory and application : the 4th Tsukuba International Conference on Memory.'' Routledge, ISBN 978-0-8058-4788-8〕
Sources conflict over who composed the music.〔Jun Hongo (July 17, 2007). Hinomaru, 'Kimigayo' express conflicts both past and future. ''Japan Times''〕 Historian Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney writes, "The composer is nominally identified as Hayashi Hiromori, a musician at the Imperial Court, but Oku Yoshiisa, who worked under Hayashi, is believed to have composed the music, with some rearrangement by Franz Eckert (1852–1916)."〔Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney (2002). ''Kamikaze, cherry blossoms, and nationalisms: the militarization of aesthetics in Japanese history.'' University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-62091-6〕 The melody that Hayashi was credited for replaced an arrangement by John William Fenton, a visiting Irish military band leader, that was rejected in 1870. The Court then adopted a new melody composed by Yoshiisa Oku and Akimori Hayashi. The composer is often listed as Hiromori Hayashi, who was their supervisor and Akimori's father. Akimori was also one of Fenton's pupils. The German musician Franz Eckert applied the melody with Western style harmony.

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