30. My mother started to teach koto in camp, but she only had two kotos. Makeshift instruments and devices were used for practice.

  • K – Kayoko Wakita
  • S – Shirley Muramoto
K
And soon, as my mother was playing, you know, people could hear. And they would say, “Do you think we could learn to do that, too?” And so, my mother would say, “Well, I have two instruments you could practice on, you know, play on one for the lesson, but I don’t have extra ones to lend.” And this led to a husband of one of the wives studied with my mother, and it took him many weeks, but he built her one. Of course it was not pawlonia wood, but he copied it as well as he could, and it was quite a decent instrument. And I thought, how wonderful! This too, the music, through music the love deepens, that he wanted to do that for his wife, to comfort her.
And then you have older women who want to do something, farming women who knew nothing about this except, “The better class people in Japan did that. I’d like to learn, and it sounds so nice!” They asked mother, and mother would say, “Sure! Sit down.” But they had no instrument to play with. And this lady said, “Well, I just move this mattress and there are about 13 wires that go around equally, so I can practice my numbers!” And that’s how she practiced with her thumb and her metal instrument. And another man made, cut up all the wire hangers he could find and made them into an instrument of sorts but no sound!
S
Is it this one? (bringing out a photo of a “koto” made at Manzanar)
K
Yes, uh-huh, he built that so that his wife could practice at least where the notes were located on the string.

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