The 'All-Japan Band Association' (AJBA) is an organization that exists solely for the purpose of facilitating an enormous annual competition among Japanese wind bands. This competition has largely promoted the
concert band idiom (called
buraban in Japanese), but in recent years AJBA has also included separate entries for
marching band and smaller
chamber music ensembles within its national competition.
The AJBA competition includes categories for elementary school, middle school, high school, university, company, and community bands. It is an extremely competitive three-tiered contest, with local, regional, and national levels of competition. In some categories - middle school for example - the
school bands that manage to reach the national level of competition are among the top 2% in all of
Japan.
The renowned
Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra is usually hired to make the definitive premier recordings of the required pieces commissioned each year for AJBA's enormous national competition. The final (national) stage of the competition is regularly held in Fumon Hall, an enormous auditorium located on the campus of the
Rissho Kosei Kai religious organization in central
Tokyo.
World's Largest Music Contest
In recent years, nearly 14,000 Japanese bands have participated annually in the AJBA competition (totaling around 500,000 contestants nationwide), making it the world's largest music competition in terms of the number of active participants. The other largest
music competitions in the world are the
Eurovision and
American Idol competitions in the field of pop music singing. While these do not exceed the AJBA competition in terms of the number of competitors, they may be larger in terms of the number of individual entrants, operating budgets, or fans (as these contests involve popular music, are marketed internationally, and enjoy a much higher global profile).
See also
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Buraban
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Wind band
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School band
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Education in Japan
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Music of Japan
Further Reading
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All-Japan Band Association Official Website
★ David G. Hebert (2005). Music Competition, Cooperation, and Community: An Ethnography of a Japanese School Band. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Washington. Ann Arbor: Proquest/UMI.
★ David G. Hebert (2001). “Hoshina and Ito: Japanese Wind Band Composers,” Journal of Band Research, Vol. 37, No. 1 (pp. 61-77).
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David G. Hebert website (list of current and forthcoming publications)
★
UW Wind Ensemble Breezes Through Japan
★
Tim Reynish on Japanese band repertoire
★ Philip V. Bohlman (2004). The Music of European Nationalism. ABC-CLIO [scholarly discussion of the Eurovision competition].
★
Nielsen ratings for the American Idol competition