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Performed on a 2.9 jinashi Taimu shakuhachi at the Sarah Strothers Benefit Concert: The Universalist Chapel, San Francisco April 19, 2013 Shakuhachi is an ancient Zen bamboo flute used by esoteric Buddhist priests and mountain hermits as a breath awareness instrument. This is an original composition for Taimu shakuhachi, although it can be played on any size flute to great effect. [This piece is now available on a full length CD you can get at CD Baby: go to http://www.cdbaby.com/corneliusboots] The long tone honkyoku pieces (like Kyorei) and slow Mississippi blues tunes (like solo Junior Kimbrough, for instance) are the primary inspirations for this piece, which is mukyoku #10. "mukyoku" is the name of the pieces written specifically for Taimu shakuhachi, which is like the cello or Barry White of the shakuhachi world. The Taimu excels at achieving a tone that is very earthy and glowing at the same time as projecting more than older style large Zen bamboo flutes (hocchiku, kyotaku for instance.) Taimu are made by Mujitsu Shakuhachi in San Francisco and more information about Taimu and mukyoku can be found on this website: http://www.mujitsu.com/mukyoku/ Cornelius Boots is an East Bay reed renegade known primarily as the leader and composer of the world's only original bass clarinet quartet, Edmund Welles. He has been dabbling in shakuhachi for over 12 years: he recently attained his jun shihan (associate teacher) certification and received the shakuhachi name 深禅 "Shinzen" (depth Zen or deep Zen) and is now working towards his Shihan (teaching license) from his teacher, Michael Chikuzen Gould.