Japanese Orchestral Favourites In the second half of the sixteenth century Japan, for a time, accepted European music, but this acceptance was cut short by...
Japanese Orchestral Favourites
In the second half of the sixteenth century Japan, for a time, accepted
European music, but this acceptance was cut short by the policy that rejected
all European influences. It was only in the second half of the nineteenth century
that the door was opened again to Europe and that European music once more
found a place. In 1921 the first Japanese work for a European-style orchestra
was composed, the Overture by Kôsçak
Yamada, who had studied in Berlin. Thereafter the number of orchestral works by
Japanese composers increased steadily, so that, from the later 1930s until
today, there are annually some thirty such compositions, mounting sometimes to
as many as a hundred. The present collection includes six of those best known in
Japan, with four of them based on the traditional Japanese pentatonic scale.
Yuzo Toyama was born in Tokyo in 1931. He studied composition under
Kan'-ichi Shimofusa, a pupil of Hindemith and a conducting student of Kurt Woss
and Wilhelm Loibner, both of whom conducted the NHK Symphony Orchestra in Tokyo
in the 1950s. Toyama has served as the principal conductor of a number of
orchestras in Japan. As a composer he has been under the influence of Bartok
and Shostakovich in particular, and like Kodaly he attaches great importance to
the use of folk melodies in his works. Among these are two symphonies, three
piano concertos and two violin concertos. His Rhapsody was written in 1960 as an encore piece for the European
tour of the NHK Symphony Orchestra in which he took part as a conductor. It
starts with repeated sounds from the hyoshigi,
a pair of wood blocks, as used in Kabuki theatre, and is followed by the
melodies of a series of well-known Japanese folk-songs. The tune of Antagata dokosa ('Where are you from?')
is heard from the trumpet, the Hokkaido fishermen's song Soran-bushi from the brass, a banquet song Tankou-bushi ('Coalminers' song') from Kyushu on the strings and
another banquet song from the Kansai area, Kushimoto-bushi
from the flute. A pack-horse driver's song, Oiwake-bushi,
from the highlands of central Japan, the Nagano region, softly played on the
flute, constitutes the central section of the whole work, which ends with Yagi-bushi, a festival song handed down
in the Kanto area, providing an emphatic finale.
Hidemaro Konoye was born in 1898 into a high-ranking aristocratic
family, the brother of the prime minister of Japan about the year 1940. He
studied composition under Kôsçak Yamada in Tokyo and later in Europe under
Vincent d'Indy and Max von Schillings, with conducting under Erich Kleiber. He
was not only an important conductor in Japan but also conducted orchestras in
abroad, including the Berlin Philharmonic, the orchestra of La Scala, Milan and
the NBC Symphony Orchestra. He conducted the first recording of Mahler's Symphony No.4 and was part of a social
circle that included Furtwangler and Richard Strauss. He died in 1973. Konoye
wrote original compositions, but was more deeply interested in arranging
existing music, including, for example, Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition and Schubert's C major Quintet, which he orchestrated. Etenraku is an arrangement of a gagaku
piece of the same title. Gagaku is
the traditional music of the Japanese Imperial court, handed down from ancient
times, played by an orchestra of woodwind, plucked instruments and percussion.
This music was introduced from China, Korea and Vietnam between the fifth and
eighth centuries and adapted to the taste of Japanese people of the day, with
original Japanese music added to the repertoire. Sometimes said to have been
introduced to Japan from China, Etenraku
is of uncertain origin. Its melody, however, has long been familiar to people
in Japan, adapted in popular songs and today often used as background music in
wedding receptions. Konoye's arrangement cleverly produces something
approaching the orchestral effect of a Western orchestra in his version for gagaku orchestra. In ternary form, the
arrangement was first performed under the direction of the composer in Moscow in
1931, to be performed subsequently in more than fifty cities throughout the
world. Leopold Stokowski included the work in his repertoire and in Europe the
piece was often regarded as akin to Debussy. Whenever this comment was made,
however, Konoye refuted it by pointing out that the truth was the opposite and
that it was Debussy who was influenced by gagaku,
which had been introduced to Europe at the Paris International Exposition of
1889.
Akira Ifukube was born in Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan,
in 1914, and was prompted to devote himself to music after hearing Stravinsky's
The Rite of Spring. Virtually
self-educated, he completed his Japanese
Rhapsody in 1935. The work won the prize instituted by the Russian emigre
Alexander Tcherepnin, who had moved to Shanghai to study Asian music and who
sought to make Japanese music more widely known throughout the world. The
judges, Roussel, Ibert, Honegger, Tansman, Harsanyi, Ferroud and Gil-Marchex,
were unanimous in their decision. The work was first performed in 1936 under
Febian Sevitsky by the Boston People's Orchestra, and in 1939 won the approval
of Sibelius at its first performance in Helsinki, events that gave valuable
encouragement to Japanese composers, whose work was still little heard abroad.
The Rhapsody consists of Nocturne and Fête. The first of these is in ternary form, its first section
dominated by a sad, folk-song-like theme, presented in an extended viola solo.
The central section is a tense evocation of the night. In Fête themes from traditional Japanese festive music are presented.
In both movements an important element is provided by the nine-man percussion
section, while the second movement involves special techniques, including
bowing on the fingerboard and the plucking of violins held downwards, like
guitars. No specific folk melody is used. As a result of the award of the
Tcherepnin Prize, Ifukube became a pupil of Alexander Tcherepnin. His
subsequent works include Symphonic Ode to
Buddha, Sinfonia Tapkaara, two
violin concertos, a marimba concerto and about three hundred pieces of
incidental music for films, including Godzilla.
Yasushi Akutagawa was born in Tokyo in 1925, the son of one of the
leading Japanese writers of the first half of the century, Ryunosuke Akutagawa.
He studied in Tokyo with Ifukube and Kunihiko Hashimoto, guided by the
aesthetic philosophy of rough manliness of the former and the lyricism of the
latter. He was greatly influenced by the music of Shostakovich and Prokofiev,
which was widely heard in Japan after the war, and he played an important part
in the musical exchange between Japan and the Soviet Union. He died in 1989.
Some of Akutagawa's works were played under the direction of leading Russian
conductors, including Anosov and Gergiev. His compositions include an opera, Orpheus of Hiroshima, Ellora Symphony, a cello concerto, and
some hundred examples of music for the cinema. Music for Symphony Orchestra was first performed in 1950 by the NHK
Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Hidemaro Konoye and was soon taken up
by Thore Johnson and the Symphony of the Air, to be heard in cities all over
the United States, leading to immediate world-wide recognition. The first of
the two movements, marked Andantino,
is in ternary form, with witty motifs appearing one after another in the first
section, supported by the snare drum, framing a central section of more
melancholy hue. The following Allegro
starts with a clash of cymbals, introducing a rondo-form movement, with an
urgently aggressive principal theme, a scherzo-like contrasting episode and a
second, lyrical episode, both making use of the characteristic interval of a
minor second, typical of the composer.
Kiyoshige Koyama was born in Nagano in the central highlands of Japan
in 1914, and studied composition under Kornei Abe, a pupil of Klaus Pringsheim,
and Tornojiro Ikenouchi, a pupil of Henri Bussel. His career started late and
it was not until after the war that his works began to be performed. His style
is based on Japanese folk tradition, the result of the influence of the
nationalist group of composers in the 1930s and 1940s, including Ifukube, Fumio
Hayasaka, and Urato Watanabe. His compositions include an opera, Sanshyo-Dayu, and a symphonic suite, Masque of Noh Play. Kobiki-uta ('a wood-cutter's song') is a set of variations based on
a traditional work- song of wood-cutters in the western region of Kyushu. It
was first performed in 1957 by the Nippon Philharmonic Orchestra under Akeo
Watanabe. The theme is offered by a solo cello, while violin and viola, playing
sul ponticello, imitate the sound of
the wood-cutter's saw. The first of the three following variations is based on
the traditional drum shime-daiko and yagura-daiko. The second transforms the
theme in various ways, accompanied by glockenspiel, celesta and harp, leading
to the bold and lively final variation, after which the theme quietly returns.
Takashi Yoshimatsu was born in Tokyo in 1953, at a time when Japanese
composers had embraced the trend towards avant-garde techniques. While absorbing
these, Yoshimatsu opposed the general fashion, returning to popular rhythms and
romantic melody and coming to be regarded as the standard-bearer of
Neo-Romanticism in Japan. He studied under Teizo Matsumura, a pupil of Ifukube,
for some time, but acquired much of his craft by himself. He is a great admirer
of Sibelius and his works include five symphonies, and concertos of piano, for
saxophone, and for bassoon. Threnody to
Toki was originally written in 1979 for eleven string instruments and piano
but in 1980 was revised for a larger orchestra and piano, a version first
performed by the Nippon Philharmonic Orchestra under Kazuo Yamada and included
here. Toki, the Japanese crested
ibis, has, from the early twentieth century, been on the verge of extinction.
In this work the composer treats the bird as the symbol of natural beauty,
oppressed by inorganic contemporary civilisation, and at the same time he sees
there the state of tonal music, widely neglected. Lamenting the fate of both,
he made the work into a prayer for their revival. The Threnody starts with the harmonics of the viola, cello and double
bass, followed by the violin, again with harmonics, playing a heart-rending
fragmentary motif suggesting the cry of the toki.
In the central part of the work the piano plays the threnody in the style of
jazz. A descending figure in the violin suggests the downward flight of the
bird, together with the motif of the cry of the toki, the whole work a prayer for its revival, as the music climbs
to a height and then fades away to a close. In the cluster technique of the
string writing the influence of Takemitsu and Penderecki can be heard.
Morihide Katayarna
English version by Yuriko Obstuka