IFUKUBE: Sinfonia Tapkaara / Ritmica Ostinata / Symphonic Fantasia No.1
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Akira Ifukube (b.1914) Sinfonia Tapkaara Ritmica Ostinata Symphonic Fantasia No. 1 Akira Ifukube was born in 1914 in Hokkaido into a family whose ancestry...
Akira Ifukube (b.1914)
Sinfonia Tapkaara Ritmica Ostinata Symphonic Fantasia No. 1
Akira Ifukube was born in 1914 in Hokkaido into a
family whose ancestry could be traced back at least to
the seventh century, serving as hereditary Shinto priests
at the Ube Shrine in Tottori. The political and cultural
changes in Japan in the nineteenth century and the loss
of traditional aristocratic power led Ifukube's
grandfather to move to the relatively neglected northern
island of Hokkaido, where his father held an official
position. Hokkaido brought contact with the music of
the inigenous Ainu and of other more recent settlers.
Schooling in Sapporo introduced him to the latest
western music through records and scores of Ravel, de
Falla and Stravinsky, to whose styles he felt close,
suggesting that it might be possible for him to create
North Asian music, where the ethnic sounds and
aesthetics of Ainu and Japanese were to be combined
with his sympathy for Slavic elements. Particularly
fascinated by Stravinsky's Le sacre du printemps, he
began composing by teaching himself in his late
adolescence.
In 1935, when he was a student majoring in forestry
at the Agricultural Department of Hokkaido Imperial
University, Ifukube applied for the Tcherepnin Awards
with his Japanese Rhapsody for full orchestra (Naxos
8.555071) and was chosen by the Paris jury for first
prize. The work received its world première in Tokyo in
1936, by Fabien Sevitsky (Serge Koussevitsky's
nephew) and the Boston People's Symphony Orchestra.
This success brought Ifukube an opportunity for
studying briefly with Tcherepnin in Yokohama. In 1938
his first work, Piano Suite, received an award at the
Venice International Contemporary Music Festival.
Some of Ifukube's works were published in the United
States and Europe, sponsored by Tcherepnin, with
success that astonished the musical world in Tokyo.
Ifukube, however, remained a "Sunday composer" for a
long time, becoming a forestry officer after graduation
and living in the deep mountains of Hokkaido. He read
about musical theories and studied scores, composing
only at night lit by the lamp in his hut. His way of life
reflected his antipathy to the Occidental concept of
modern urban life. In these surroundings he studied the
music of northern races and wrote some important
works, including his Symphony Concerto for piano and
orchestra (1941) and Symphonic Ballade (1943).
After World War II Ifukube eventually became a
professional composer and moved to Tokyo. In those
days, many of his contemporaries were eager to
assimilate avant-garde music from Europe, but Ifukube
was against the movement and kept composing
consistently in an ethnic style, finally winning
acceptance. His music, brimming with multi-cultural
melodies and rhythms, persistent ostinato and violent
rhythms, has exerted influence even on Japanese pop
music. Ifukube is a cult figure for those who aspire for
and advocate Asian music in modern Japan. It is also
possible to define his repetitive music in relation to
minimalist or post-minimalist music. He taught at
Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music and Tokyo
College of Music, even assuming the post of dean of the
latter. His pupils include Yasushi Akutagawa, Toshiro
Mayuzumi, Akio Yashiro, Teizo Matsumura, Sei Ikeno,
Minoru Miki and Maki Ishii. Ifukube is a prolific
composer and his list of works covers music for
orchestra, cantatas, music for ballet, pieces for chamber
ensemble, piano and guitar, music for Japanese
traditional instruments, songs based on northern folkmusic,
and some three hundred film scores. In addition
to that, he wrote a definitive work on orchestration, used
by most Japanese composers. The present release
contains three works representing Ifukube's
compositions after the war.
Sinfonia Tapkaara was completed in 1954 and had
its première in Indianapolis in January of the following
year by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra under
Sevitzky. The work was later revised and the new
version was first given in Tokyo in April 1980, with
Yasushi Akutagawa and the New Symphony Orchestra.
It has since been played widely in Japan. It is scored for
triple wind, harp, varied percussion and strings.
Tapkaara denotes a dance style of the Ainu, danced by
the tribal leader on rituals and feasts, often expressing
gratitude for the blessings of nature. This would be
familiar to Ifukube, who, while not making such full use
of Ainu music, reflects his antipathy towards modern
civilisation and avant-garde music. The first movement
in quasi-sonata form starts with a Lento molto
introduction, leading to an Allegro, its second theme
presented by trumpet over clarinet, harp and strings,
sounding like a primitive lullaby or nursery rhyme
commonly found in Ainu and Japanese traditional
music. There is an Andante development, where the two
themes are treated in a slow march tempo. After slow
episodes by solo horn and solo cello, the music moves
to the recapitulation and conclusion. The ternary-form
Adagio has a first theme that suggests the traditional ryo
or ritsu pentatonic scales, together with a descending
figure that reflects miyako-bushi, a traditional
pentatonic scale symbolizing sadness. The composer
describes this movement as an impression of a calm
night in Otofuke. The third movement, Vivace, vividly
evokes Ainu celebration, with overt use of the Tapkaara
dance and scale.
Ritmica Ostinata for piano and orchestra was
completed in 1961 and had its première in Tokyo in
October of the same year with the soloist Yutaka Kanai
and the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra under Masashi
Ueda. The composer later revised part of the score and
the present version appeared in 1972. The
instrumentation is the same as Sinfonia Tapkaara. This
concertante work has four chief characteristics. The first
is the persistent use of ostinato. The second is the
reliance on the hexatonic scale, a potential for the basis
of pan-pentatonic or pan-Asiatic music, if extracted and
employed appropriately, a possible link between the
pentatonic and heptatonic scales, Orient and Occident.
The third feature is the frequent use of metres of five
and seven beats, reflecting literary tradition, and the
fourth is the non-pianistic treatment of the solo part,
suggesting the dulcimer or the santur, or even the koto
and biwa. The work is in a form suggesting a rondo,
with an Allegro framing slower sections.
Ifukube later made his living mainly by teaching
and by writing music for films, particularly between
1947 and 1970, although he continued to write such
music from time to time after that date. The film
directors he worked with include Akira Kurosawa,
Mikio Naruse and Joseph von Sternberg, and he held a
position parallel to that of Toru Takemitsu and Fumio
Hayasaka. His music for the cinema includes many
monster films like Godzilla. Symphonic Fantasia No.1
is a medley-like concert arrangement by the composer
himself of his music for monster films represented by
the Godzilla series. The work, first given in Tokyo in
August 1983 by Yasuhiko Shiozawa and the Tokyo
Symphony Orchestra, has been performed all over
Japan. The introduction is based on the Appearance of
Godzilla motif frequently used in the Godzilla series. It
is grotesque chromatic music, using all the twelve notes
of the octave. Then follows the title music for Godzilla
(1954), the title music for King Kong versus Godzilla
(1962), the love theme from Battle in Outer Space
(1959), the Varagon motif from Frankenstein versus
Varagon (1965), and the battle music of Godzilla and
the monster Radon from Ghidrah (1964), where
Godzilla is depicted by the motif used in the
introduction and Radon by a chromatic motif on the
trumpet. After a fanfare comes the march section, where
the march from Battle in Outer Space and the quasipentatonic
pastoral march from the 1968 film Destroy
All Monsters are interwoven.
Abridged from notes by Morihide Katayama
Translation: SOREL
Sinfonia Tapkaara (more info)
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Lento molto - Allegro - 11:28
-
Adagio - 6:21
-
Vivace - 8:08
Ritmica Ostinata for Piano and Orchestra (more info)
-
Ritmica Ostinata for Piano and Orchestra - 21:33
Symphonic Fantasia No. 1 (more info)
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Symphonic Fantasia No. 1 - 13:15