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Kanon Vol 1

Thank goodness she has the violin, everything else in her life is a mess.


Shoujo mangaka Chiho Saito is best known as the creator of the manga versions of Revolutionary Girl Utena. This series, Kanon, is her next best known work, having won the 42nd Shogakukan Manga Award for shoujo in 1997; in fact, it's part of what influenced Utena director Kunihiko Ikuhara to invite Saito-sensei to join Be-PaPas. It predates and foreshadows many of the themes and trends in Utena, sometimes to the point where one wonders if certain ideas and scenes from Kanon were simply recycled in order to make whole segments of the famous shoujo mindscrew.

Kanon Hayashi is an 18-year-old Japanese girl with a wild, freedom-loving spirit, who has an amazing talent for playing the violin. She lives in Mongolia with her mother, spending a very simple life among shepherds and handling a small hotel, for as long as Kanon can remember. As far as she knows her father passed away before her mother even knew she was pregnant, so she stayed in the plains to raise her.

Around the time Kanon and her mom are visited by a Japanese musician named Tendou Kawahara, Mrs. Hayashi has been in bad health for a while and dies few after Kawahara's arrival, but leaves her the knowledge that her Japanese father is alive and is a famous musician. (She's unable to reveal his name, unfortunately.) Then, Kanon travels to Tokyo in search of her mysterious father. She meets by chance Gen Mikami, genius composer and director of a boarding music school as well as The Rival to Kawahara, who is impressed by Kanon's gift for music. He decides to help her find her father and teach her violin to bring her talent out. Kanon eventually falls in love with handsome 30-something Mikami, and he returns her feelings. They start a torrid romantic/sexual affair...

... and then, in a twist that shows well Saito's love for breaking taboos, they find that Mikami is actually Kanon's father.

Kanon was serialised in Shogakukan's "Petit Comic" magazine from 1995 to 1997, and was collected into six paper volumes for its initial release and three volumes for its later bunko rerelease. The series was translated and published with great success in several countries, including Italy, France and Spain, but has never had an official English-language release.

Absolutely not to be confused with the other Kanon, a seinen visual novel and anime.[1]


Trope Namer for:[]

  • Aoyama Panel Judge: Because of the result of the "17th Piano Competition in Memory of Aoyama". This is the manga that made the words "in memory of Aoyama" a common expression among shoujo fans.

This manga provides examples of:

  1. If it helps, the two are written differently in Japanese. Seinen Kanon is カノン (in katakana), whereas this Kanon is 花音 (in kanji, being as it's the main character's name).
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