5 Sounds That Tell Kyoto’s Story

From the steady dripping of raindrops in the rainy season, to the cicada in the summer heat, to the gurgling of spring streams from melting snow, Kyoto is filled with nature. Thanks to its history that dates back to AD 794, a discerning listener can also hear sounds that transcend the urban roar of modern times: Zen monks on their begging round, the clatter of looms in the weaving district, temple bells that boom at end of day, and these five unique sounds that encapsulate the city’s rich heritage.

A purifying echo

Japanese gardens boast few ornaments. A stone lantern or water basin is typical. More rare is the suikinkutsu, which adds an acoustic dimension. You place your ear against a bamboo pipe protruding from the ground, and for a moment you hear nothing but a profound silence. All of a sudden a harp-like sound reverberates as a drop of water falls onto water inside a pot buried underground. As the sound merges back into nothingness, a sense of calm succeeds it. Just as the stone basin holds water for physical cleansing, the sound of the suikinkutsu purifies the soul. It’s Japanese aesthetics at its most delicate, found only at a few temples, such as Enko-ji.

 Image courtesy Hugo Kempeneer, a Kyoto based photographer. www.kyotodreamtrips.com

The whisking of ancient tea

The tea ceremony originated in China but took its present Japanese form under the influence of Zen in a ritual based on mindfulness. All is still, save for the graceful movement of the tea master, who mixes the ingredients with a bamboo whisk. Guests sit motionless on bent legs as the kettle builds up steam. The bitterness of the taste is offset by the accompaniments, a small sugary sweet and a cake typically made of red-bean paste. These reflect the season, as do the calligraphy, decoration and utensils used in the ceremony.

Enjoy a cup of Japanese tea, or take a tea ceremony lesson at Shakusui-tei, the tea house at Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto.

The rattle of gods

Videography courtesy Pond5/Christopher Bertucio

Kyoto is a city of never-ending festivals, supreme among which is the Gion Matsuri. It lasts the whole of July, and the high point is a grand parade of 32 floats. The religious heart of the festival involves three portable shrines containing the kami (gods), which are borne aloft to their “resting place” to preside over proceedings. The men who carry the heavy wooden palanquins shake them for the enjoyment of the kami, and the carriers encourage themselves with traditional calls and liberal amounts of sake, “drink of the gods.”

The creak of prosperity

Photography courtesy Pond5

Amid the abundance of nature in Kyoto’s river basin, bamboo groves stand out for their beauty. The grove in the Arashiyama district is particularly cherished for its vista of tall trunks and filtered sunlight. The wind rustling through the leaves makes a “zawa zawa” sound, while the creaking and groaning of the slender stems speak of the tree’s famed flexibility. With its ability to thrive in harsh conditions, bamboo not only serves as a symbol of prosperity, often featured on kimono, but also furnishes material for such local crafts as basketry, fencing and matting.

The strum of the geisha

Photography courtesy Pond5

Nothing encapsulates Kyoto like the figure of the geisha. The kimono, hairstyle, accessories and comportment are fashioned by centuries of refinement. The rigorous training includes dance and music, with particular attention to the kouta (little song), the lyrics of which concern drinking, transience and lost love. The songs are played on the three-stringed shamisen, which originated in China and was introduced to geisha in the 18th century. They can spend years mastering it.

Performances are exclusive and can be even more difficult for outsiders to gain access, however, they can be arranged. Talk to your Concierge at Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto or arrange your own here.

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Venture to this ancient city and hear its heritage for yourself.

Kyoto lanterns

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What O‘ahu Sounds Like at Sunset

In ancient Hawaii there was no written communication, only the spoken word. Words were a source of power, wisdom and protection. Chanting became an extension of speaking and, when combined with prayer, was used to bless and to protect the people and the land.


Thomas Anuhealii, Cultural Ambassador to Four Seasons Resort O‘ahu at Ko Olina and a native of nearby Nānākuli, performs the Ke aui nei ka lā chant near the rocky cove of Ko Olina Beach almost every day at sunset. And if guests listen closely enough, they may hear his gentle song to the sun and find peace themselves.

Sunset is a sacred time in Hawaii. – Thomas Anuhealii, Cultural Ambassador at Four Seasons Oahu

“We put the sun to sleep to bring to a close the day’s worth of manna, life force,” Anuhealii explains, “and acknowledge that we, too, must go to sleep, that we shall see each other again the next day.”

The traditional Hawaiian chant has significance in any venue where the sun sets over the ocean. But Anuhealii says it has particular resonance in Ko Olina because two life forces integral to Hawaiian life combine here: the mountains and the sea.

“The life force of water flows down from nearby Pālehua Mountain into the upper land, where it waters the native taro. From them it flows into the sea where it gives life to the fish.”

And so as the sun sinks to the horizon, Anuhealii begins to chant (translated here from Hawaiian into English):

The sun is descending

Setting, setting

Dusk is approaching

Crawling, crawling

The descending at the root of Lehua

At the horizon

Sleep, sleep

Greetings, O heavenly foundation

Greetings, O foundation of the world

Chilled to the bone I am.

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Find inner peace at O‘ahu at Ko Olina

mountain views at Four Seasons Resort Oahu at Ko Olina

Historic Hotels: Rooms With a View to History

To celebrate European Heritage Days, take a grand tour of European Heritage by way of historic Four Seasons properties.

Want to sit in the historic ballroom where the League of Nations first assembled? Visit the estate where Henry VIII first set eyes on Catherine of Aragon? Or swim in a Côte d’Azur pool designed by an Italian spy? If you’re a lover of history and a guest of Four Seasons, there’s no need to leave these Four Seasons landmark properties to do so.

Grand-Hôtel du Cap-Ferrat, A Four Seasons Hotel


Four Seasons Cap Ferrat Club Dauphin Pool

Taking a dip in the Cap-Ferrat Dauphin Pool is like dipping your toe into history. The pool was built by an Italian spy, and it stands today as a monument to World War II and the perseverance of architecture.

The magnificent Grand-Hôtel du Cap-Ferrat was built in 1908 at the tip of the isolated Cap Ferrat peninsula in southeastern France. At the time, it was seen as incomplete by many, so it was immediately given additional amenities like a dining loggia and a large central rotunda designed by the famous architect Gustave Eiffel, who spent his winters in neighbouring Beaulieu-sur-Mer.

In the years leading up to World War II, the property was frequented by European princes, lords and baronets; prominent financiers; artists and writers like Jean Cocteau and Somerset Maugham; Hollywood stars; industry leaders; and heads of state. But none of them provided the property its most interesting story.

Grand-Hotel du Cap-Ferrat, A Four Seasons Hotel

That came from a simple Italian bricklayer, who surprised hotel management in 1939 by engineering and building the Hotel’s structurally complex waterfront pool in one day. Years later, during Italian occupation of the Côte d’Azur, the bricklayer again showed up at the Hotel, this time in a dashing military uniform and said to the manager, “Nice to see the pool held up.” Turns out he was as an Italian spy who used the Hotel’s prominent clients as a source of intelligence. The Club Dauphin pool is still a gem among the Hotel’s many amenities and is accessed via a private glass funicular.

Four Seasons Hotel Firenze


Four Seasons Florence Royal Suite Della Gherardesca

The Royal Suite Della Gherardesca at Four Seasons Hotel Firenze is the perfect place to relax in this convent-turned-hotel.

Convents turned hotels are a dime a dozen these days, but few can boast as rich and textured a history as Florence’s timeless Palazzo Scala Della Gherardesca. It was built during the golden age of Florence at the dawn of the Renaissance, and converted to a Four Seasons hotel in 2008. The estate, later the Suor Maria Riparatrice convent, was commissioned in 1473 by the humanitarian scribe Bartolomeo Scala, who also happened to be the chancellor to Florence’s legendary Lorenzo the Magnificent, the head of the influential Medici family long known for their patronage of the arts.

Four Seasons Hotel Firenze

The leafy palazzo was later home to Cardinal Alessandro de’ Medici, who reigned as Pope Leo XI for a mere month in 1605 before he died suddenly, earning him the nickname Papa Lampo (“The Lightning Pope”). The frescos that adorn the property’s walls are by the Renaissance painters Giovanni Stradano and Baldassarre Franceschini.

Four Seasons Hotel Hampshire


Four Seasons Hampshire Gate to the Gardens

The charming gardens at Four Seasons Hotel Hampshire were the meeting place of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, who would forever change the Tudor line and legacy.

Dogmersfield Park is the name of the estate on which this 18th-century Georgian Manor sits, but its origins date back to 1086 and the Domesday Book, a survey of England commissioned by King William the Conqueror. The book describes “Doccemere feld, by the lake where the water lilies grow,” as a placid and peaceful place.

Four Seasons Hotel Hampshire

400 years after this description was penned, the bucolic field would play a pivotal role in the tumultuous Tudor history as the place where Catherine of Aragon met two of her future husbands—first Arthur, Prince of Wales, then, after Arthur died of “sweating disease,” his younger brother Henry the VIII, who was five years her junior.

Henry VIII, of course, went on to marry five other wives, throwing the Tudor dynasty into a tailspin that would eventually undo it. Guests who want to imagine the royal liaisons in more detail can still explore the 23 acres (9.3 hectares) of English Heritage gardens and more than 500 acres (200 hectares) of tamed parkland to help reconstruct the past.

Four Seasons Hotel Istanbul at Sultanahmet


Four Seasons Istanbul at Sultanahmet Gardener in Courtyard

Once an infamous prison, Four Seasons Hotel Istanbul at Sultanahmet has become a luxury hotel now hosting voluntary guests.

The celebrity guests at this century-old, neoclassical property have included artists and political figures like communist leader Mihri Belli, novelist Orhan Kemal, and dissident poet Nâzım Hikmet. And they all have one thing in common: They never checked in. At least not willingly.

Four Seasons Hotel Istanbul at Sultanahmet

The charming property in the heart of Istanbul’s historic Sultanahmet district was once the infamous Turkish prison Sultanahmet Cezaevi; the courtyard is the prison’s old exercise yard. Today, the accommodations are much more grand, but guests can still visit the corridors upstairs to see a few of the prison’s original support columns, which are marked by graffiti and the etchings of former inmates.

Four Seasons Hotel des Bergues Geneva


Four Seasons Geneva Salle des Nations Ballroom

The magnificent neoclassical Hotel des Bergues, built in 1834 and now a historic Swiss landmark, occupies a prominent position in the heart of Geneva on the shores of Lac Léman. The Hotel’s Salle des Nations ballroom boasts soaring ceilings and is festooned with crystal chandeliers and gigantic gilt mirrors; it remains a popular event space with visiting dignitaries today.

Four Seasons Hotel des Bergues Geneva

But in 1920 it was the site of the first assembly of the League of Nations, predecessor to the United Nations. The Hotel became the unofficial headquarters of the French delegation chaired by Prime Minister Aristide Briand; the son of innkeepers was rumoured to have been impressed by the meticulous 1917 renovations of the Hotel. Historians claim that Briand’s many meetings at the Salle des Nations had a greater influence on international relations than the formal sessions held in the Palais des Nations. Briand would receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 1926, and the property became a Four Seasons hotel in 2005.

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Four Seasons Hotel Bergues Geneva, Switzerland