Mayuzumi: Bugaku / Mandala Symphony / Rumba Rhapsody
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Toshiro Mayuzumi (1929-1997) Symphonic Mood Bugaku Mandala Symphony Rumba Rhapsody Toshiro Mayuzumi is one of the most important Japanese composers,...
Toshiro Mayuzumi (1929-1997)
Symphonic Mood Bugaku Mandala Symphony Rumba Rhapsody
Toshiro Mayuzumi is one of the most important
Japanese composers, enjoying an international
reputation in the period after World War II. He was
born in 1929 in Yokohama, a city that had developed
after Japanese isolationism came to an end and therefore
relatively free from Japanese traditions and
conventions. Mayuzumi's father was a sea-captain, and
Mayuzumi, was brought up in this unique environment,
which nurtured his yearning for the exotic, including
Asia, America and Europe. His father's occupation had
another influence over the future composer in view of
his absence from home during the first eight years of the
composer's life, an absence for which he later found
compensation in the strength later apparent in his music.
His family was not especially musical, but as was
common with many rich families of the day, the family
had a reed organ. Mayuzumi started to take piano
lessons in his primary school days and composed
dozens of songs and piano pieces, consulting books on
music theory.
In 1941, Mayuzumi entered Yokohama Dai-ichi
Junior High School. In war-time, Japanese schools and
companies organized students and workers into choral
groups, wind bands, school bands and harmonica bands,
to enhance solidarity and to entertain people. Mayuzumi
belonged to the harmonica band and the choral society
at school, in addition to playing the double bass in an
amateur orchestra. Progressing in his piano playing and
aspiring to be a professional composer, he began to
study music theory under a composer living in
Yokohama, Taro Nakamura, whose style was neoclassical,
a pupil of Kan'ichi Shimofusa who had
studied with Hindemith in Berlin.
In the spring of 1945 Mayuzumi entered the
composition department of Tokyo Music School
(Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music), known as
the best music institute in Japan. There his classmates
included Akio Yashiro, his life-long friend. They began
to study with Qunihico Hashimoto, chief professor of
the department, but his studies at school were often
interrupted by war-time conditions and frequent airraids.
Hashimoto, therefore, decided to take him into his
home and continue to give him lessons. At the time
Hashimoto was one of the central figures in Japanese
music, providing patriotic music, while privately
experimenting with unpublishable dodecaphonic music.
Mayuzumi learned four things from Hashimoto, the
music of Debussy, Ravel and Stravinsky, a certain
versatility creating an extensive range of music from
progressive pieces to pop music, how to dress and
behave fashionably, and a patriotic attitude.
Musical fashions changed in Japan during the war,
when Chinese and Indonesian pop-tunes replaced the
banned American jazz. Latin-American music escaped
prohibition, with the result that the tango and the rumba
were allowed, and the blues was barred. Mayuzumi's
yearning for exoticism was fulfilled by Asian and Latin-
American music. After the war there were considerable
changes in the Tokyo Music School. Hashimoto, a pupil
of Egon Wellesz in Vienna and an associate of
Schoenberg and Krenek, was forced to resign.
Mayuzumi and his friend Yashiro now began to study
with two new teachers, Tomojiro Ikenouchi, a pupil of
Henri Busser and Paul Fauchet at the Paris
Conservatoire, and Akira Ifukube, who was discovered
by Alexander Tcherepnin. Ikenouchi, an admirer of
Ravel and under the influence of French academism,
was then one of the finest composers and educators in
Japan. From him Mayuzumi learned techniques of
harmony and polyphony, based on the Conservatoire
tradition. Mayuzumi's interest in Debussy and Ravel,
acquired first under Hashimoto, was deepened under
Ikenouchi. Ifukube, on the other hand, worshipped
Stravinsky's Le sacre du printemps and was attached to
ostinato and earthly, violent music only possible with a
big orchestra. He was also proficient in physics and
acoustics and was an expert theorist in orchestration.
Mayuzumi's earlier interest in Stravinsky was
developed under Ifukube.
The post-war collapse of the Japanese economy
affected the Mayuzumi family. Compelled to make
money for his schooling, Mayuzumi played the piano in
a jazz band, a form of music now in demand again,
while continuing studies with Ikenouchi and Ifukube.
Graduating in the spring of 1951, Mayuzumi and
Yashiro received a French Government scholarship and
entered Tony Aubin's class at the Paris Conservatoire.
While Yashiro loved Aubin's academic methods,
Mayuzumi returned to Japan after a year. In Paris,
however, he had discovered Pierre Schaeffer's tape
music, using sounds of trains, street noises and
electronic sounds as composition material. His interest
in this led him to the belief that music using ephemeral
sounds would replace European traditional music. He
also came to know Varèse and Messiaen before and
after his arrival in Paris.
Drawing on these diverse influence, Mayuzumi
came to hold a leading position in Japanese music, even
before his studies in Paris. In his Divertimento for Ten
Instruments (1948), he showed a complete command of
the neo-classical techniques of Stravinsky, Milhaud and
Ibert, and created a kind of stateless music, appropriate
for a man from Yokohama. In Sphenogramme for Eight
Players (1950), he displays exotic elements, making use
of ethnic styles from India and Indonesia, and by using
Ifukube-style ostinato in many places. The work was
given an award in the ISCM (International Society of
Contemporary Music) Festival in 1951 and was
performed in Frankfurt. In Symphonic Mood he
summed up his musical experiences in war-time, using
elements from Latin music and Southeast Asian music.
His skilful, powerful orchestration amazed Japanese
composers, earning him a reputation as an enfant
terrible of the post-war music world.
The two orchestral works, Bacchanal (1954) and
Tonepleromas '55 (1955), completed after Mayuzumi's
return from France, aim at powerful, paternal,
"pleromas" sounds, as if to combine jazz, Latin music,
Varèse and Stravinsky, by unique instrumentation,
where wind instruments are mainly used. Bacchanal
was performed by Leonard Bernstein and the New York
Philharmonic, and Mayuzumi believed that his unique
rhythms, harmonies and orchestration exerted some
influence on Bernstein's West Side Story.
X-Y-Z (1953), in which real sounds including cries
of animals and sounds of firing guns are used, is the
first-ever piece of musique concrète in Japan.
Mayuzumi also created the first piece of electronic
music in Japan, in the electronic music studio of NHK,
the Japanese public broadcasting station. Sextet for
Winds and Piano (1955) and Mikrokosmos for Seven
Players (1957) try to combine "pleromas" sounds with
post-Webern style, then the latest trend.
In 1950 Mayuzumi started to write music for films
and created some 250 works throughout his career, his
versatility enabling him to meet any popular
requirements. He wrote a number of fascinating theme
songs for film and his "pleromas" sounds, his speciality,
were especially effective in action movies. He also
composed for television, radio and the theatre, in
addition to writing jazz songs and French chansons for
record companies. Following the example of
Hashimoto, he used the most advanced techniques of
composition, and at the same time wrote pop music,
following his teacher's example in his music and in his
life-style.
In the mid-1950s Mayuzumi was inspired by the
sounds of bells from Buddhist temples in the ancient
city of Kyoto. When composing electronic music, he
recorded bell sounds and analysed the structures of their
complex overtones, using newly acquired technology.
He then transferred the analysed sounds to a symphony
orchestra with sextuple winds and combined the
orchestra with male chorus singing Buddhist priests'
chant-like prayer Shomyo. Drawing again on elements
of Stravinsky, Messiaen and Webern, he finally
completed his Nirvana Symphony in 1958. This was
performed in Berlin and New York, as well as in Japan,
and had influence on Takemitsu's Solitude Sonore,
seeking inspiration in the sounds of the bell.
After the 1960s Mayuzumi continued to explore
Japanese traditions, finding in its sources something
beyond mere exoticism. The process brought his
Mandala Symphony in 1960, and the symphonic poem
Samsara (1962) , derived from Buddhist ideas, Bugaku,
and Showa Tenpyoraku (1970), inspired by Japanese
traditional imperial music gagaku.
On 25th November 1970 the internationally famous
novelist Yukio Mishima, with whom Mayuzumi had
often collaborated in film, theatre and broadcast,
committed hara-kiri, having failed to engineer a coup
d'etat against the American-imposed constitution of
1945. Inspired by Mishima's ideas Mayuzumi enjoyed
close connections with right-wing conservative parties
and religious groups, engaging himself in various
movements to restore national solidarity, while working
as a musician. He was the presenter of a popular weekly
television music programme from 1964 to 1997, as well
as the chairman of the Japan Federation of Composers
and the Japanese Society for Rights of Authors,
Composers and Publishers (JASRAC). He also taught at
his alma mater, with pupils including Satoshi Minami,
Isao Matsushita, Yukikazu Suzuki, Yutaka Takahashi
and Taro Iwashiro. After the 1970s Mayuzumi wrote
less than before, neglected, perhaps, by the rise of leftwing
thinking among musicians. In fact his two operas
Kinkakuji (1976), based on Mishima's novel, and Kojiki
(1993), based on Japanese mythology, the most
important works of his later years, were commissioned
by foreign organizations. The former was first given by
the Deutsche Oper Berlin and the latter in Linz.
Japanese premières were not easy and the latter had its
Japanese première after the composer's death.
Mayuzumi died on 10th April 1997.
Symphonic Mood, Mayuzumi's first orchestral
work, was completed on 1st November 1950 and was
first performed on the 16th of the same month by
Hisatada Odaka and the Nihon Symphony Orchestra
(today's NHK Symphony Orchestra). About this work
the composer wrote as follows: "In this work I tried to
express nostalgia, which is universally found in man's
mind and goes far back to man's primitive self. The
music is imbued with southern, tropical mood, as music
from those areas seems to me most appropriate to
express nostalgia. Such music is at the same time
primitive and artistic."
Bugaku is ballet music commissioned by the New
York City Ballet. It was completed on 23rd March 1962
and had its première in New York on 20th March 1963,
choreographed by George Balanchine and conducted by
Robert Irving. The work reflects dance music, a form of
gagaku, with its samai (left dance) and umai (right
dance), echoed in the two parts of the composition.
Mandala Symphony was completed in 1960 and on
27th March had its première in Tokyo by Hiroyuki
Iwaki and the NHK Symphony Orchestra. Inspired by
his interest in Buddhism, the Mandala Symphony draws
on the doctrine of the maha-vairocana, which is infinite
and covers every corner of the real world, once regarded
as the world of pains. It reflects a kind of pantheism in
which the entire world is the incarnation of mahavairocana.
It is just that man is too stupid to understand
it. So man needs to be prepared through ascetic life,
where mandala plays an important rôle. Mandala is a
two-dimensional or three-dimensional picture and
depicts the truth of maha-vairocana. Ascetics
contemplate the mandala in a search for spiritual
awakening. If they are successful, they will become
living Buddhas and will have infinite powers. In his
symphony Mayuzumi tried to create an audible instead
of a visible mandala, through which the truth that the
real world is the incarnation of maha-vairocana can be
perceived in nine stages, step by step. Seen from top to
bottom, it shows the way Buddha descends to preach
truth to man, and if seen in reverse, the way man
ascends to seek after the Buddhist truth. Mayuzumi
expressed these two types of mandala by two
movements, which are integrated by using two six-note
rows acquired through analysis of the structure of the
overtones from the bell of a Buddhist temple.
Rumba Rhapsody was completed on 9th April 1948.
Mayuzumi intended to use this work for his debut as an
orchestral composer, but before that he decided to make
use of its main materials for another piece: the second
part of Symphonic Mood. As a consequence, Rumba
Rhapsody sank into oblivion, losing opportunities for
performance. The performance on this recording
amounts to its première.
Abridged from notes by Morihide Katayama
Translation: SOREL
Symphonic Mood (more info)
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I. Moderato: Allegro moderato - 9:27
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II. Vivo - 9:15
Bugaku (more info)
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I. Lento - 14:09
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II. Moderato - Un poco meno mosso - Allegretto - Lento - 9:06
Mandala Symphony (more info)
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I. Vajra-dhatu mandala: Tempo non equilibre - 6:32
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II. Garbha-dhatu mandala: Extremement lent - 11:04
Rumba Rhapsody (more info)
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Rumba Rhapsody - 8:00