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Japanese manga series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kanon (花音, Kanon) is a Japanese music manga written and illustrated by Chiho Saito. It was serialised by Shogakukan in Petit Comic from 1995 to 1997 and collected in six bound volumes. Kanon received the 1997 Shogakukan Manga Award for shōjo manga.[1]
Kanon | |
花音 | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama |
Manga | |
Written by | Chiho Saito |
Published by | Shogakukan |
Magazine | Petit Comic |
Demographic | Josei |
Original run | 1995 – 1997 |
Volumes | 6 |
A pregnant Japanese photographer travels to Mongolia and ends up staying there. Eighteen years later, Yuko runs a hotel with the help of her daughter, Kanon, who shows great talent with the violin. Following an accident, a dying Yuko reveals that Kanon's father is alive and that she has inherited his musical gift. Hotel guest Tendo Kawahara comes to Kanon's aid. She moves into Tendo's apartment in Japan and attends classes arranged by him. He decides that the person most fitting to guide Kanon is Gen Mikami, an arrogant conductor. Mikami is also head of a music school. Kanon is enrolled there.
Yuko's sister lets her niece know about the three men she believes are most likely to be her father: violinist Koki Sawa, pianist Sachio Kajiwara, and conductor Kent Gregory. Kanon eventually finds out that Sawa is dead and that his wife was his only love. Kajiwara has no interest in women. Kent, the last candidate, immediately tells Kanon she is his child. A happy time ensues.
All through the search for her father, Kanon grows closer to Mikami. She confesses her love and he lies, saying he is only interested in her talent. Weeks after Kanon's first meeting with Kent, Mikami sees a picture of Yuko and realizes he knew her. He fell in love with her when he was still a teenager. After their first night together, she disappeared from his life.
Kent hides from Kanon that he is ill and only has a short time left to live. After collapsing during a performance, he confesses in a letter that he is not Kanon's father. He loved Yuko and saw nothing wrong in him and Kanon brightening each other's life. He also writes that a pregnant Yuko told him that the baby's father played a Guadagnini.
Following Kent's death, the letter falls into Tendo's hands. He realizes that Mikami is Kanon's father. Meanwhile, Kanon and Mikami have sex for the first time. Finding out the truth leads to Mikami ending their relationship, despite Kanon not wanting that. Deeply upset, she exchanges an expensive ring for an airplane ticket to Thailand. Tendo, who is in love with Kanon, finds her and takes her to Mongolia, her home country, where she remembers her love for music.
Years later, Kanon and Mikami see each other again. She still wants to be with him. He says that their relationship can only exist in the realm of music, a notion she rejects. Later, playing a piece of his while he conducts, she realizes the truth in his words: during the emotional performance he is neither her lover nor her father, but something else. They hug on the stage. Then Kanon goes to find Tendo, who has always loved her.
Written and illustrated by Chiho Saito, Kanon was serialised by Shogakukan in the josei manga magazine Petit Comic from 1995 to 1997. The serial chapters were collected in six tankōbon volumes under the Flower Comics imprint. In 2003, Flower Comics re-released the manga in three bunkoban volumes.[2]
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