Nagata Shachu Biographies
 
 


Nagata Shachu Biographies

Please Note:
Nagata Shachu performs with as few as three to a maximum of six players depending on the size and scope of the performance and venue. The standard group size is five performers.

Kiyoshi Nagata
Scott Kusano
Aki Takahashi
Angela Colangelo
Nick Shao
Atsushi Kato
AkemiAkachi

Kiyoshi Nagata (taiko,shinobue, and shakuhachi)

Kiyoshi Nagata, the ensemble's artistic director, is Canada's preeminent taiko soloist who has been performing in a career that spans twenty-seven years. His principal studies were with Daihachi Oguchi (as artistic director and performer of the Toronto-based, Suwa Daiko from 1982 to 1992) and with Kodo (as an apprentice from 1993 to 1994). With the assistance of a Chalmers Performing Arts Training Grant in 1999, Kiyoshi studied classical percussion with Paul Houle at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto.

Since 1998 Kiyoshi has taught a credit course in taiko at the University of Toronto's Faculty of Music. In September 2003, he began teaching a public course at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. For eight years, he instructed two community groups, Isshin Daiko in Toronto and Do-Kon Daiko in Burlington, which he helped establish in 1995. Kiyoshi is also regularly invited by universities and taiko groups to conduct workshops and present lectures.

In 1994, Kiyoshi founded the cross-cultural percussion ensemble, Humdrum, whose debut Toronto performance was ranked fourth in Now Magazine's "Top Ten Concerts of 1995". He has composed and performed taiko music for dance, theatre, film and radio and continues to collaborate with artists from all genres of music including traditional Japanese instrumentalists.


Scott Kusano
(taiko, shinobue, shakuhachi)

Scott has played taiko on and off since childhood first with the Toronto Suwa Daiko and later in 1995, as one of the original members of Isshin Daiko, a group that was formed by the Toronto Buddhist Church and Kiyoshi Nagata. It was through this encounter that Scott became a founding member of Nagata Shachu beginning a taiko career spanning over a decade.

In 2003, while living in Fukuoka, Japan, Scott was instructed in the making and performing of the shakuhachi by the late Nomiyama Higao of Kasuga-shi. Though Scott's training was cut short due to Mr. Nomiyama's lung cancer, he continues to strive for the warmth and strength of tone that were the legacy of Mr. Nomiyama's style.

   


Aki Takahashi (taiko, vocals, and shamisen)

Aki was born in a small fishing village on Shodoshima, a small island in the Inland Sea of Japan. As a young girl, she had weekly piano lessons and developed a secret passion to become a musician thanks to her grandmother who was always singing folksongs.

Aki began to study the three-stringed Tsugaru Shamisen and folk singing in Kyoto and was able to make the acquaintance of other musicians like her who were trying to keep this traditional music alive. Since moving to Canada in 2000, she has continued to share her music with audiences in a wide variety of venues ranging from street performing to local festivals such as the Canadian Tulip Festival and the Ottawa Folk Festival.

Aki is also the founder of the Japanese Folk Music Collective Ten Ten

 


 



Angela Colangelo
(taiko and shinobue)

Angela developed a passion for taiko while taking lessons with Kiyoshi Nagata at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Jan 2004. She played the silver flute for over 20 years, studying and performing classical and contemporary music and was taught by various teachers including Susan Hoeppner. She took Psychology and Music at the University of Waterloo studying performance, composition and music therapy. Angela has also taught piano to young children with an emphasis on making learning fun and assisting them to develop their confidence.

   


Nick Shao
(taiko)

Nick began studying drums and percussion at the age of 10 at the Humber College Community Music School in Etobicoke and continued on to attend the Etobicoke School of the Arts where he was awarded the prestigious Lionel C. Wooster Jazz Award. He has performed all across North America, the Netherlands, Austria and Hungary with a diverse number of jazz, rock, world music and orchestral ensembles including the Toronto All-Star Big Band and the Toronto Symphony Youth Orchestra.

Nick completed his Bachelor of Music degree in Jazz Performance at the University of Toronto where he was first introduced to taiko and also studied West African drumming, Indonesian Gamelan and Chinese music ensemble. Nick teaches drum kit at the Classical Music Conservatory in Toronto.

   


Atsushi Kato (taiko)

Atsushi was born in Aichi, Japan, and started learning koto (Japanese zither) from his mother at the age of ten. In school he played trumpet in a marching band for three years. During high school and university he was active in both Judo and badminton. Having recently moved to Toronto, Atsushi was eager to study the taiko, which had always interested him in Japan, as a means of maintaining his Japanese identity in this multicultural city.

 


Akemi Akachi
- Apprentice (taiko)

Akemi Akachi is a Japanese descendant born and raised in Mexico. She began studying piano at the age of four. She completed her Bachelor degree in Composition at Las Rosas Conservatory in Mexico in 2004. Akemi has been involved in the creation of multidisciplinary projects with choreographers and dancers. She has taught music theory, ear training and sight singing to children and university music students. Her pieces have been performed in different venues both in Mexico and Canada. She moved to Toronto to earn her Master’s degree in Composition at the University of Toronto, graduating in 2008. While studying there she took the Taiko course taught by Kiyoshi Nagata and found a deep passion for this art form.

     
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