Umeko Ando
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Umeko Ando | |
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Background information | |
Born | November 20, 1932 |
Origin | Husikokotan, Obihiro, Hokkaidō, Japan |
Died | July 15, 2004 | (aged 71)
Genres | Ainu |
Instrument(s) | Mukkuri |
Years active | 1960–2003 |
Umeko Ando (安東 ウメ子, Andō Umeko, November 20, 1932 – July 15, 2004) was an Ainu singer and mukkuri player. Her participation in Oki Kano's second album Hankapuy, helped her gain recognition. She recorded several albums, including her solo debut album, Ihunke, produced by Oki in 2001, that was praised by critics and artists alike, and many music publications in Japan declared it the best world music album of the year. It was followed by her second studio album, Upopo Sanke, in 2003, with Chikar Studio, which gained worldwide attention.
She died from cancer on July 15, 2004, at her hometown Makubetsu-cho, Hokkaido, at the age of 71.
She is featured posthumously on the Samurai Champloo soundtrack with her song "Pekambe Uk" (ペカンベ ウㇰ, "Wheat Harvesting Song"). The seventeenth episode, "Lullabies of the Lost", which featured this song, was dedicated to her memory with the message "May her soul rest in peace" in the ending credits.
Discography
- Ihunke (2001)
- Spirits From Ainu (2002)
- Upopo Sanke (2003)
- Keutowm
External links
- Umako Ando receives the Ainu Cultural Award
- Umeko Ando biography in Oki's official website
- Umeko Ando at Discogs
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- 1932 births
- 2004 deaths
- Japanese Ainu people
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- Musicians from Hokkaido
- 20th-century Japanese musicians
- Ainu artists
- Japanese folk singers
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