747313283927

Ohki: Japanese Rhapsody / Symphony No. 5, 'hiroshima'

New Japan Po:Yuasa

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Format: CD

Cat No: 8557839

Release Date:  30 September 2006

Label:  Naxos / Naxos Classics

Packaging Type:  Jewel Case

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  747313283927

Genres:  Classical  

Composer/Series:  OHKI

  • Description

    Masao Ohki (1901-1971) Japanese Rhapsody • Symphony No. 5 'Hiroshima' Masao Ohki was born on 3 October 1901 in Iwata, a small provincial city on the Pacific coast in central Japan, and grew up in the larger nearby city of Shizuoka. His father was a teacher at a girls' high school and he spent his childhood during a period when westernisation was bringing an interest in western music, with operas and orchestral concerts occasionally heard in big cities like Tokyo. The circumstances in provincial cities were different. There were only a few pianos in Shizuoka and not even a small orchestra. Musical interest was mainly in Japanese traditional works. Ohki's father liked to play the shakuhachi, a bamboo flute, and Ohki himself played it from his childhood. With unstable pitch and a mysteriously 'cloudy', somewhat husky timbre, the instrument has especially been associated with asceticism and Zen meditation. The experience of shakuhachi music was to exert a significant influence on Ohki's own work. At the same time he had some experience of western instruments, and was able to hear recordings of classical Chinese operas and arias from Bizet's Carmen, as well as a variety of Japanese traditional music. The basis of Ohki's melodies was always the shakuhachi music and the recordings he heard, and, above all, Japanese traditional music.After completing his junior schooling in 1910, Ohki went on to technical senior high school in Osaka and majored in chemistry. He was now able to study the shakuhachi with master-players, and formed a male choral group with his classmates. At the same time he had an opportunity to hear Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 and Tchaikovsky's '1812' Overture. This was his first encounter with full-scale orchestral music. Deeply impressed by these works, he wished vaguely to write orchestral music, but lacked the means to pursue this ambition. He therefore started by studying vocal music more minutely and by writing nursery songs.Graduating in 1921, he began work as an engineer for a factory in Tokyo and continued his studies of vocal music, but soon came up against the limitation of Japanese singers singing in foreign languages with pronunciation and intonation essentially different from those of the Japanese language. Leaving his job, he moved to Ueda, a small city in the mountainous area of central Japan, to teach at a girls' school, and then finally made up his mind to devote himself to writing orchestral music.Believing that music should possess power to affect society and that good music could contribute to the pursuit of happiness of the people, Ohki took Tchaikovsky as his model, seeking to make the most of Japanese traditional music represented by the shakuhachi. To realise his dream, he returned to Tokyo. Working part-time to keep himself, he allotted as much time as possible to the study of composition, working under Giichi Ishikawa, who had studied music in California from 1906 to

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Japanese Rhapsody
      • 2. Prelude
      • 3. Ghosts - It Was A Procession Of Ghosts
      • 4. Fire - Next Moment Fire Burst Into Flames
      • 5. Water - People Wandered Around Seeking Water
      • 6. Rainbow - All Of A Sudden Black Rain Poured Over Them And Then Appeared A Beautiful Rainbow
      • 7. Boys And Girls - Boys ANd Girls Died Without Knowing Any Joy Of Human Life And Calling For Their Par
      • 8. Atomic Desert - Boundless Desert With Skulls
      • 9. Elegy

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