Koto Differences and similarities

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The Koto and Guzheng share a great deal of their history. They have much in common and plenty different. Let’s dive in! Disclaimer: I have no direct experience with the koto. Everything here is based on findings from secondary sources like “The Koto, A Traditional Instrument in Contemporary Japan” (Page 30-49 especially). Try your local town or college library; it’s out of print and online retailers are inflating prices astronomically (current prices range from $300 to $3,700).

Update: Two other great sources to check out are the Orchestration in Gagaku Music from Stanford and Pro Musicia Nipponia based in Tokyo.

Koto Differences from Guzheng

  • typically smaller string count
  • typically longer instrument
  • finger picks are on rings
  • strings are single thickness, ~single tension; pitch is controlled by bridge placement. Bridges are spaced in many patterns
  • farthest string from player might not be lowest pitch
  • strings are counted 1-13+ from farthest to closest (opposite of modern guzheng,  same as older zheng)

Koto Similarities with Guzheng

  • long zithers from Asia
  • movable Bridges
  • uses finger picks
  • tuned to pentatonic scales

From the Museum of fine Arts, Boston, MA, USA. Used under Fair Use exception of US Copyright law.

Summary

Just like “guzheng”, “koto” refers both to a class of instruments and specific ones. “Guitar” is another example. For example, "What type of guitar do you play? 6 String? Resonator?” When most people think Koto they are picturing the Yamadagoto: 182 cm long, 24 cm wide, with 13 strings.

Koto came to Japan from China in ~700 CE. That instrument was the Tang Dynasty zheng. Since then sizes of koto have ranged from 13-30 strings, 69-240 cm long, and 22-50 cm wide.  Some of the smaller ones are called Iris koto (Ayamegoto) with the longest easily the Sanjūgen, 30 strings, 240 cm long and 50 cm wide. There was even one koto made in the 1920s with 80 strings called the Hachijūgen. It was played once publicly in 1929. It was destroyed by an air raid in 1945. A second was made in 1978 and is on display in Miyagi Michigo Memorial Museum.  it was roughly triangular 213 cm long and from 37-98 cm wide.  The 80 strings meant it could play roughly the same range of notes as an 88-key piano. The  17 string jūshichigen and 20 string nijūgen have had waves of popularity and various modifications.

A contemporary 13 or 17 string koto have little feet hold it off the floor, tend to have less decoration, and their movable bridges made entirely of ceramic or plastic, or wood tipped with bone, plastic, or ivory. The bridges are very similar to guzheng bridges.

Finger picks are hard materials like bone or plastic (or ivory)  and are mounted in rings. There are two major Styles: Square tips from the Ikuta tradition or rounded or pointed tips for the Yamadagoto tradition.

Strings

Unlike Guzheng strings, koto strings are all the same thickness on a typical instrument, ranging in weight classes from 16-19 momme (匁, a measurement for silk fabric.) Every string is set to the same tension; the pitch is controlled by the placement of the bridges. Strings were originally silk, then tetron or nylon.

Tuning

The two most popular tunings are the Hirajōshi and Kumoijōshi tunings. See further down for more.

Common Hirajōshi koto tuning ranging from A3 to B5.

Common Hirajōshi koto tuning ranging from A3 to B5 with Bb.

Table of Koto Types

Many variants have been made over the years, each with terms to match. While I can’t offer an explanation for them all, this list may help you look up more you may be interested in. “Shaku” is a unit of length.

Taken from “The Koto” (2004)

ArutogotoAlto Koto
AyamegotoIris Koto; Short
BēsugotoBass Koto
BunkagotoCulture Koto; Short
Dai-jūshichigenLarge Seventeen Strings
ErekutorikkugotoElectric Koto
Goshakugoto5 Shaku Koto
HachijūgenEighty Strings
HansōHalf-Size Sō
HimegotoSmall Koto
ImamuragatajüshichigenImamura-Style Seventeen Strings
JūgogenFifteen Strings
JūhachigenEighteen Strings
JūrokugenSixteen Strings
JūshichigenSeventeen Strings; Bass
Kābongoto jüsangenThirteen-String Carbon-Fiber Koto
KazuneJapanese Sound; Short
KogatagotoSmall-Size Koto
KurumagotoCarriage Koto
MinichuagotoMiniature Koto
MinigotoMini Koto
Mijikai kotoShort Koto
NagaisōLong Sō
Neo-kotoNew Koto; Short
NijūgenTwenty Strings
NijūichigensōTwenty-One String Sö
PoppukōnPopcorn; Seventeen Strings
SanjūgenThirty Strings
Sanshakugoto3 Shaku Koto
Shin-FukuyamagotoNew Fukuyama Koto; Short
Shō-jūshichigenSmall Seventeen Strings
SopuranogotoSoprano Koto; Short
TangotoShort Koto
Tan-nijūgenShort Twenty-Strings
Teion-nijūgenOr Tei-Nijūgen: Bass Twenty Strings
Teion-nijūgogenBass Twenty-Five Strings
Yonshakugoto4 Shaku Koto

Koto Tunings

There are many ways to tune a koto. The two most common are Hirajōshi and Kumoijōshi from the Zokusō tradition, but many others are used. The In and Yō scales are part of these tunings, but a tuning is not a scale.

Grouped by Gakuso, Okinawa / Ryūkyūgoto, and Zokusō traditions and ordered by Latin alphabet. These come from “The Koto” (2004).  Shamisen.info is another source for tuning tables; I do not know enough to say how theirs relate to these.

Strings are numbered from 1 (low, bass notes) to 13 (high, closest to performer). This is the reverse from modern guzheng.

Gakusō Tunings

Okinawa / Ryūkyūgoto Tunings

Zokusō Tunings