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9 strokes

奏 — To Play Music, Perform

N1
On: ソウ
Kun: かなで・る

Meaning

(ソウ / かなでる) covers two distinct uses: to play a musical instrument, and in classical texts, to formally present a report to a superior. Modern Japanese uses the musical sense almost exclusively. Concert programs, music reviews, and school-club announcements all rely on this character. Casual conversation, less so.

What separates 奏 from related kanji like 弾 (to pluck) or 吹 (to blow) is scope. It describes performance as a whole, not the specific technique used to produce sound.

The character's structure reflects its origin. The upper portion depicts three objects raised upward; the lower half is (great, important). Together they show someone lifting something valuable toward a person of higher rank. In classical China and Japan, formally presenting a report to the emperor used exactly this word. The extension to music follows naturally — both involve offering something of worth to an audience or authority.

At 9 strokes, 奏 is a Joyo kanji taught at the middle-school level, placing it squarely in N1. It also appears outside music: 奏功 (そうこう, "to produce results") shows up in medical and business writing whenever a strategy succeeds. The radical is — a sense of scale and ceremony is embedded in the character from the start.

Readings

On'yomi (音読み) — Chinese-derived readings

The on'yomi ソウ (sou) drives nearly every compound. Most music-related vocabulary in Japanese runs through this single reading, making it the one to master first.

  • 演奏えんそう (ensou) — musical performance; the standard, everyday word for playing music before an audience
  • 演奏会えんそうかい (ensoukai) — concert, recital; a public or ticketed music event
  • 演奏者えんそうしゃ (ensousha) — performer; the musician on stage
  • 伴奏ばんそう (bansou) — accompaniment; supporting music behind a lead performer or vocalist
  • 独奏どくそう (dokusou) — solo; a single performer playing without accompaniment
  • 合奏がっそう (gassou) — ensemble; two or more musicians performing together
  • 吹奏楽すいそうがく (suisougaku) — wind band, concert band; a staple of Japanese school clubs
  • 奏功そうこう (soukou) — success, good effect; when a plan, treatment, or effort produces positive results

Kun'yomi (訓読み) — Native Japanese readings

The kun'yomi かなで・る (kanaderu) is the standalone verb form meaning "to play a musical instrument." Literary and poetic writing favors it when the emphasis is on expression over technique — a violinist doesn't just produce notes, they かなでる. Derived from the classical verb 奏づ (かなづ), it conjugates as a Group 1 (godan) verb.

  • かなでる (kanaderu) — to play (dictionary form)
  • かなでた (kanadeta) — played (past tense)
  • かなでている (kanadete iru) — is currently playing (progressive form)
  • かなではじめる (kanade hajimeru) — to begin playing

Common Words & Compounds

The vocabulary around 奏 clusters into a few clear groups. Recognizing the pattern cuts down the memorization load considerably.

Performance and Performers:

  • 演奏えんそう (ensou) — musical performance; the most common word for playing music before an audience
  • 演奏会えんそうかい (ensoukai) — concert, recital; a ticketed or public music event
  • 演奏者えんそうしゃ (ensousha) — performer; the person playing an instrument
  • 奏者そうしゃ (sousha) — instrumentalist; used in orchestral contexts (e.g., フルート奏者そうしゃ, flutist)

Types of Performance:

  • 独奏どくそう (dokusou) — solo; a single performer playing alone
  • 合奏がっそう (gassou) — ensemble; a group performing together in coordination
  • 伴奏ばんそう (bansou) — accompaniment; background music that supports a lead singer or soloist
  • 吹奏すいそう (suisou) — playing a wind instrument; the act of blowing to produce sound
  • 吹奏楽すいそうがく (suisougaku) — wind band, concert band; hugely popular in Japanese junior and senior high school clubs

Musical Forms and Compositions:

  • 協奏曲きょうそうきょく (kyousoukyoku) — concerto; a classical work featuring a soloist with orchestra
  • 前奏曲ぜんそうきょく (zensoukyoku) — prelude; an introductory piece that opens a larger work or performance
  • 奏楽そうがく (sougaku) — playing music; a formal term used in ceremonial contexts

Beyond Music:

  • 奏功そうこう (soukou) — success, good effect; when a strategy, treatment, or effort yields results. Example: 治療ちりょう奏功そうこうした (the treatment worked). This traces back to the original meaning of presenting a successful outcome to a superior.
  • 奏上そうじょう (soujou) — to report to the emperor; a historical and classical usage found in literature and period texts

Example Sentences

Kanojo wa utsukushii merodii wo kanadeta.

She played a beautiful melody.

Kinou no ensou wa totemo subarashikatta.

Yesterday's performance was outstanding.

Kare wa suteeji de piano wo dokusou shita.

He performed a piano solo on stage.

Suisougaku-bu no ensoukai ni kite kudasai.

Please come to the wind band club's concert.

Futari wa iki no atta gassou wo hirou shita.

The two gave a tightly coordinated ensemble performance.

Sono chiryou ga soukou shi, kanja wa sugu ni kaifuku shita.

The treatment worked, and the patient recovered quickly.

Pianisuto ga risaitaru de kyousoukyoku wo migoto ni ensou shita.

The pianist performed the concerto brilliantly at the recital.

Kanojo wa baiorin de zensoukyoku wo shizuka ni kanade hajimeta.

She quietly began playing the prelude on violin.

Bansou nashi de utau no wa muzukashii.

Singing without accompaniment is difficult.

Kaze ga kigi wo yurashi, shizen no ongaku wo kanadete iru you datta.

The wind rustled through the trees, as if performing the music of nature.

Memory Tip

Picture a conductor at the podium — that is the (great person) at the base of 奏. The strokes above represent three sections of an orchestra, arms raised toward the sky. The whole shape captures lifting music upward and presenting it to a waiting audience: exactly what 奏 means.

For the verb かなでる: think of sound flowing freely from an instrument, the way water comes from a spring. Writers reach for it when they want music to feel like expression rather than execution — not pressing keys, but releasing something.

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