You Gotta Quintet

You Gotta Quintet
Genre Music
Educational Program
Starring Akira Miyagawa
Haruhiko Saitō
Tesshō Genda
Ayumi Shigemori
Ken'ya Ōsumi
Country of origin Japan
Release
Original network NHK Educational
Audio format Stereo
Original release 2003 April 7 - 2013 March 30
External links
[http://[1] Website]

Quintet is a TV program which was aired by NHK Educational in Japan.

About the show

The program offers witty interpretations of classical music for children. Programs feature puppets and a variety of music and cultural entertainment. This program introduces nonsense and music into daily life for the pleasure of children, and features a musical group called "The Evening Quintet". The music featured includes folk songs and classical music, with a variety of instruments such as piano, violin, and clarinet.

Schedule

Program

Quintet

Quintet Petit

Quintet Petit was broadcast from April 3, 2006 to March 30, 2007 and March 31, 2008 to March 27, 2009. It used the third and fourth parts from the main show.

Characters

Partial list of original songs

The original songs are written by Kei Shimoyama and Akira Miyagawa. Here are some of them.

Theme song

"The 'You gotta Quintet' Theme" is used to open and close the show. The text of theme song changes with the seasons; the spring version is aired from March to May, the summer version is aired from June to August, the autumn version is aired from September to November, and the winter version is used from December to February. The text of the opening theme was changed in 2007.

Singing corner

In this featurette the Quintet song team presents original songs, works derived from classical material, and folk songs. Here are some of them.

Repeat and Rebroadcast

Repeat

Rebroadcast

Quintet
Two weeks in a row two weeks of reruns the previous week.
Quintet Petit
First week of each month, two weeks after this broadcast, a rerun of the first week of the third week, reruns will be broadcast two weeks to four weeks.

CDs and DVDs

CDs

DVDs

Awards

On December 1, 2005, the program won an Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union Award in the children/young people program section) with the notation "that was able to stream down splendor, the pleasure that this program used the doll, and the music had" at the 42nd annual general meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam.[2]

Production staff

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.