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Are there any good universities in Japan to study jazz? Accept international students majoring in jazz
The satisfactory answer has serious problems. I graduated from Nagoya University of Arts, majoring in jazz. Except for two or three public universities in Japan, all the other music and art universities have jazz majors. It's just that some universities don't have jazz undergraduate courses, only junior colleges. For example, Osaka Conservatory of Music has only a junior college, but no jazz undergraduate course. Japan is the country that jazz is second only to the United States in the world. I believe everyone who likes jazz will know this. Moreover, Japan's Foot-washing Music University has the reputation of Berkeley in the East. In Japan, jazz bars are everywhere, and there are many opportunities to perform and learn. You can often listen to various live concerts in fats waller.

It is suggested that if you are a bass major, you should study at Zuzu Music University. Mr. Nahoyi is a Japanese first-class jazz bass player and a Japanese first-class electric bass master. In recent years, it is very popular in Japan and the United States.

Nagoya University of the Arts, I think, is more suitable for China students, with less investment, because this university reduces the tuition fees for international students by 50%.

I studied under the famous jazz bass player in Donghai, Japan, named Mr. Ye Yi Gudao. I'm honored.

Welcome to Japan to learn jazz.

Remarks: Aichi University of the Arts recruits international students, and my good friend graduated from the College of Composition Department of that university. Compared with private universities, Japanese national public art universities are different in that the tuition fees are much lower than those of private universities, but the majors are incomplete, the equipment is poor, the school buildings are small, and the floor space is small. Aichi University of the Arts has no jazz major.

The different professional names of japanese pop art universities lead some people to think that there is no jazz major, and many of them are called pop music majors instead of jazz majors, but the teaching is mainly to teach jazz. Brother who asks questions, you only need to pay attention to the two words of Japanese jazz and pop, and you can know that there is a jazz major in the University of Music and Arts in Japan. Generally, there is no such major, but there are only two or three public art universities in China.

Moreover, many music and art universities in Japan do not need a language test when applying for the exam (there is no need for Japanese scores or experiments for foreign students), which is very different from other liberal arts universities. Some even need you to provide the experimental results of foreign students, but that's just for reference. I am honest. I took the entrance examination of Nagoya University of the Arts only after I finished studying the language school seriously. I was a junior, and the language school only took the entrance examination in our university for four months, which really saved the money of the language school.

The preferred country to study jazz abroad is the United States, and the preferred school is Berkeley Conservatory of Music.

The second country is Japan, and the first school is Zuzu Music University.

Candidate countries Brazil or Cuba, if you go to these two countries, the suggestion is to learn jazz percussion.

If you go the wrong way and study jazz in Europe, you go to Vienna, Austria or Germany. For example, it's equivalent to studying China's Peking Opera in the United States. That's funny.