Asterism

Born in Tokyo, Takemitsu first became interested in western classical music around the time of World War II. He heard western music on American military radio while recuperating from a long illness. He also listened to jazz from his father’s ample collection.
Takemitsu was largely self-taught in music. He was greatly influenced by French music, and in particular that of Claude Debussy and Olivier Messiaen. In 1951 he founded the Jikken Kobo, a group which introduced many contemporary western composers to Japanese audiences.
Takemitsu at first had little interest in traditional Japanese music, but later incorporated Japanese instruments such as the shakuhachi (a kind of bamboo flute) into the orchestra. November Steps (1967), a work for shakuhachi and biwa (a kind of Japanese lute) solo and orchestra was the first piece to combine instruments from east and west. In an Autumn Garden (1973-79) is written for the kind of orchestra that would have played gagaku (traditional Japanese court music). Works such as Eclipse, (1966) for shakuhachi and biwa, Voyage (1973), for three biwas should also been mentioned as works that are decidedly derived from traditional genres.
Takemitsu first came to wide attention when his Requiem for string orchestra (1957) was accidentally heard and praised by Igor Stravinsky in 1959. (Some Japanese people wanted Igor Stravinsky to hear some tape recorded music by Japanese composers and put in the wrong side of the tape; when they tried to take it out, Stravinsky didn’t let them.) Stravinsky went on to champion Takemitsu’s work.
During his career, Takemitsu composed music for motion pictures, including scores for directors Hiroshi Teshigahara, Akira Kurosawa, Masaki Kobayashi, and Shohei Imamura.
Takemitsu died in Tokyo on February 20, 1996

Commissioned in 1968 by RCA Records, this work is for piano and orchestra with an expanded percussion section with unusual methods of articulation: the spine of a comb is run across a suspended cymbal, a double-bass bow used on three suspended cymbals, and so on. All three definitions of the title constitute the poetic meaning of this music – a group of stars, a constellation; crystallized minerals showing a starlike luminous figure in transmitted or reflected light; and the three asterisks placed before a passage to direct attention to it. The music is characterised by lovely crystalline textures from glockenspiel, harp, metallic percussion and the piano. Impressionistic chords from the high strings, and Messiaen-like brass chords provide celestial imagery. Sliding tones from plucked strings and lower brass suggest more earthiness. A brief solo statement from the piano is followed by breaking sounds (light bells, ratchets, rattles) from the percussion suggest the punctuation nature of the title. Toward the end, the music enters a quasi-random chaotic crescendo of uncoordinated cycling motifs and sizzling cymbals and gongs. Suddenly, the sound is suspended and a quiet transparent texture emerges, then silence, and a single final note from the piano. A lovely, brief, poetic vision.

Download Takemitsu music from AvantGarde Project 24.

Toru Takemitsu – Asterism (1968), per piano e orchestra
Toronto Symphony Orchestra – Seiji Ozawa (conductor) – Yuji Takahashi (piano)

5 thoughts on “Asterism

  1. Ciao! Il formato flac non si scarica, mi dà “file non trovato” ed il mirror site “unavailable”.
    Peccato! vado sul mp3.

  2. l’ho scaricato proprio ieri.
    forse è saltata fuori qualche edizione (nel caso sia disponibile su disco lo levano)

  3. temo di sì. anche lo mp3 continua a disconnettersi, perciò è praticamente impossibile a scaricarsi.

  4. no, da me si scarica benissimo (ma alle 2 di notte).
    il fatto che salti dipende solo dalla linea (o dalla banda) che di giorno qui in italia attualmente fa schifo

  5. Beh, sorpresa del mattino: avevo messo il link del sito con i flac in un download manager ed oggi, da solo, sta scaricando. Misteri del web…….

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