Shimabara Lullaby
Shimabara Lullaby (Japanese: 島原の子守唄 or Shimabara no komoriuta) is a folk song-like lullaby by Kohei Miyazaki of Shimabara, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan.
General
[edit]Shimabara Lullaby was written in the early 1950s by Kohei Miyazaki (1917-1980). It is related to the Karayuki-san, the poor Japanese girls sold to work overseas as prostitutes, in Southern China and the Pacific island areas, such as Sandakan on Borneo.[1]
This song became famous when Chiyoko Shimakura recorded it in 1957, followed later the recordings by Peggy Hayama, Hisaya Morishige and others.
Lyrics
[edit]The original song had five stanzas, but is usually sung in three stanzas, the first of which starts with:
Japanese[edit]おどみゃ島原の おどみゃ島原の
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Romanized Japanese[edit]Odomya shimabara no, odomya shimabara no,
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English translation[edit]I was born in Shimabara, I was born in Shimabara,
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The lyrics cannot be fully listed for copyright reason.
See also
[edit]- Lullaby
- Folk song
- Other Japanese lullabies: Edo Lullaby, Itsuki Lullaby, Takeda Lullaby, Chugoku Region Lullaby, etc.
References
[edit]- ^ About Shimabara Lullaby (in Japanese)
External links
[edit]- Shimabara Lullaby (A Hundred Lullabies in Japanese, in Japan Society of Lullabies' home page)