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Toru TAKEMITSU
Nami no Bon and Ran
Toshio HOSOKAWA
Memory of the Sea (Hiroshima Symphony) - premiere recording
Atsutada OTAKA
Fantasy for Organ and Orchestra - premiere recording
Bryan Ashley (organ)
Sapporo Symphony Orchestra/Tadaaki Otaka
CHANDOS CHAN 9876 [87:41]
Crotchet
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This album contains four works by three modern Japanese composers, mixing original concert pieces with music derived from the screen. The opening piece, Atsutada Otaka's Fantasy for Organ and Orchestra, is both the longest of the four, and least likely to find popular favour. Atsutada Otaka is the older brother of the conductor, making this premiere a particularly personal event. His Fantasy is in a single movement, in this recording lasting 28 minutes, written as a 1999 commission for the debut concert of the new hall at the Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music. It is an unsettled and unsettling piece, devoid of any clearly recognisable melody or centre. Finding any sort of focus is difficult, as passages of almost dreamlike detachment alternate seamlessly with sequences of distant and austere menace. The organ, in a part demanding unflamboyant virtuosity from Bryan Ashley, is a remote yet unforgiving anchor, around which the orchestra quests, individual solo lines evaporating before making any certain mark. This is music which now sounds old-fashioned. While not broaching anywhere near the unfriendly extremes of rampant 50s and 60s serial/12-tone writing, its lineage can be traced in that direction. It is, like a nebulous bad dream, a work which lingers on the edge of memory without ever suggesting why it should be remembered, haunted in its own lack of resolution.

The centre of the album is made-up of two screen-derived works by the late Toru Takemitsu, noted both for his concert and film music. Few in the West will ever have heard of Nami no Bon, a Japanese television drama about 'conflict between first and second generation Japanese-Hawaiians during the Pacific War.' The suite here is in six movements lasting 18 minutes. There is nothing obviously 'Japanese' or 'Hawaiian' about any of this music. Given the wartime setting one might be expect excitement and action, but instead the music is elegantly nostalgic and wistful centred around two beautiful main themes. The resigned heartbreak of 'Tray of Waves', imaginatively orchestrated with delicate chimes and lovely woodwind, suggests a restrained version of classic 1950s Hollywood, whilst the sheer lyricism of 'Faded Letter' is proof, if any were needed, of this composer's poignant sensibilities. 'Misa's Theme' can stand as a monument to the power of understatement, as indeed can the painfully bittersweet 'Finale', with only 'Shadow of Night' offering more conventional suspense writing.

More obvious conflict arises in the almost 12 minutes of music by Takemitsu derived from Akira Kurosawa's celebrated Ran (1985), a translation of King Lear to medieval Japan. This is an epic film, though the music here, while implicitly martial, does not suggest the scale of Hollywood's approach to such matters. Here, in these four numbered, untitled movements, is a simmering stone-dry tension. The first three cues; a fatalistic string theme strides with slow stoicism through interruptions from distant brass; a wind machine echoes the finale of Vaughan Williams' score for Scott of the Antarctic (1948), met with a lone bell and deep, brooding strings; timpani beat the gathering of forces, a horn calling a lament. The final cue, longer than the first three at over six minutes, is a portrait of defeat and despair, anguish and implacable horror with a very human face. This, though the notes do not tell us, is the finale, the aftermath; music as coruscating as any film music in recent memory.

Another premiere recording, Memory of the Sea (Hiroshima Symphony) by Toshio Hosokawa, ends the programme. It is a single movement work lasting just under 20 minutes. Hosokawa was born in 1955 and grew-up in Hiroshima, his aim here to write a piece which paid homage to the recovery of the city in the aftermath of the atomic bomb, to the beauty of the countryside and to the invisible power of nature. It is a glittering, richly orchestrated paean, filled with mercurial wonderment riven with tension, light and fire flashing through the percussion with a tumultuous spirit; as if perhaps Bax and Scriabin had joined forces to unleash a new Prometheus. It is not, by normal Western definitions, a symphony nor even a symphonic poem, but whatever it is, it is spellbinding. In live performances two groups of banda (musicians playing apart from the main orchestra) move around the hall, creating a three dimensional effect). By moving the musicians at various times in the recording, an attempt has been made to replicate this effect. While obviously difficult to recreate through two speakers, the CD certainly offers a vivid kaleidoscope of sound.

Given the sheer constancy and quality of Chandos recordings, one barely need mention that this is a first-rate production, stunningly recorded by producer Tony Harrison and engineer Mike Hatch. The booklet is thoroughly informative, and the only thing we are left wondering is when Nami no Bon was made. This is a contrasting selection of works which has something to offer devotees of concert hall and film music alike. Those willing to embrace the heady flowers of the new will be enthralled by the rapturous Memory of the Sea. While not to all tastes, an imaginative and rewarding release, and at almost 79 minutes outstanding value too.

Gary S. Dalkin

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