Beautiful Folk Songs Passed Down in Miyagi Prefecture: A Collection of Masterpieces that Play the Heart of the Hometown
The many folk songs that live on in Miyagi Prefecture are sonic treasures that vividly reflect Tohoku’s culture and the lives of its people.
From mountain songs set against majestic peaks to fishermen’s songs praising the bounty of the sea, the rich voices born from the land and people’s way of life can still be heard across the region.
This article brings together folk songs from Miyagi, centered around Sendai.
Why not lend an ear to the gentle melodies imbued with the feelings of our forebears—melodies that evoke the changing seasons, the bustle of festivals, and the joys of farm work?
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Beautiful Folk Songs Passed Down in Miyagi Prefecture | A Collection of Masterpieces That Play the Heart of the Hometown (21–30)
Miyagi Daikokumai

A celebratory song from Miyagi Prefecture that sets the heart dancing with a bright, lively melody said to invite good fortune.
The brisk rhythm of taiko drums and shamisen is layered with the soaring tones of the shakuhachi, leaving listeners with a clear, uplifting feeling.
This work, imbued with gratitude to Daikoku-sama and wishes for people’s prosperity, is perfectly suited to auspicious occasions.
It’s also a lovely anecdote that it has been carefully passed down as a Miyagi tradition, performed by children at local elementary schools.
Heard at New Year’s or at send-offs marking new beginnings, it’s sure to make the occasion all the more festive.
Water-Drawing Song

This is a beautiful work song from the Kurihara region of Miyagi Prefecture, evoking scenes of life-giving water flowing through the countryside.
The earnest hearts of people living in harmony with nature, praying for a bountiful harvest, are wonderfully woven into a melody that is both powerful and warm.
The piece was created by local residents in the late 1950s to 1960s and has been lovingly passed down in the community.
Even today, it is still performed at local events.
Its tune, which carries a certain nostalgia that transcends generations, feels truly comforting.
Listening while picturing your hometown scenery, the sound of the shamisen and the soaring vocals can sink into your heart, leaving you with a gentle feeling as if wrapped in Japan’s primal landscape.
Hishi Tori Song

This is a work song that was once sung in Miyagi Prefecture while rowing boats to gather seeds of aquatic plants from a marsh that used to spread across the area.
The place names that appear in the lyrics and the lively calls exchanged on the boats vividly evoke the cooperative labor of the people of the time.
The rich expressions that conjure up the marsh at dusk and even the presence of the mountains are also a major appeal of this piece.
Sung by master folk performers and carefully passed down in the region, this song is a cherished part of local tradition.
Why not listen closely and let your thoughts wander to the simple landscapes and the way of life that once existed in Miyagi?
Moji JinkuKanichi Sato

“Moji Jinku” is a folk song handed down in the Moji hamlet of Kurikoma Village, Kurihara District, Miyagi Prefecture (present-day Numakura and Matsukura in Kurikoma, Kurihara City).
Together with “Tōshima Jinku” and “Shiogama Jinku,” it is known as one of the three great jinku of Miyagi Prefecture.
There was a time when it seemed likely to disappear due to a lack of singers, but the local Sugawara Shinichi family began singing and dancing it, leading to the revival of Moji Jinku.
rice sectionMasato Fujita, Yoshiaki Omura

The Miyagi Prefecture folk song “Kome-bushi” is a parody song that uses, unchanged, the melody of “Hakata Kojorō Namemakura,” with lyrics by Masato Fujita and music by Yoshiaki Ōmura.
The shakuhachi player Tenjin Hoshizora added lyrics like a celebratory song praising rice.
It has become a song that resonates with the Japanese spirit of cherishing even a single grain of rice.
Autumn Mountain SongKazuo Kumagai

Autumn Mountain Song was sung during the comings and goings of work in which people, from before dawn on summer mornings, would cut grass in the nearby mountains and return with the cut grass loaded on a horse’s back.
It originally derived from Kikari-uta, a song sung while cutting mixed hardwoods in autumn, and it was widely sung in northern Sendai, including Miyagi, Kurokawa District, and Monou District.
Saitaro-bushiKohei Fukuda

This is a rock-style rendition of Miyagi Prefecture’s representative folk song, “Saitaro-bushi.” It lets you feel how folk music changes over time.
There is also a song called “Kodomo Saitaro Rock” with lyrics by Akio Oka, and it’s said that children sometimes dance to it at recitals and school performances.





