By Colleen Coveney

The Japanese word gagaku translates to “elegant music,” and refers to the instrumental and vocal music and dance performed within the Imperial Court of Japan. An exhibition at the UC Santa Barbara Art, Design, and Architecture Museum is now displaying the unique instruments used in this traditional art form.

Gagaku originated during the 10th-13th centuries and blends ancient Chinese, Korean, Indian, Persian, and Southeast Asian influences with songs and dance from Indigenous Japan.

The thousand-year-old “elegant music” is made with distinct strings, woodwinds, and percussion instruments specific to gagaku, and is regarded as the oldest orchestral music of the world.

The exhibition “Sound of a Thousand Years,” which includes items from UCLA, UCSB, Scripps College, and Kokugakuin University Museum collections, will be on display until May 1, 2022. It was curated by the Art, Design, and Architecture Museum staff in collaboration with Fabio Rambelli, Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at UC Santa Barbara.