After studies in Europe 
                Mayuzumi returned to Tokyo in 1953. 
                There he co-founded with Dan and Akutagawa 
                the composers' pressure group known 
                as the Sannin no Kai or the Group 
                of Three. 
              
 
              
John Huston's 1965 
                epic The Bible starred Richard 
                Harris, Ava Gardner, George C. Scott, 
                Peter O'Toole, and Huston himself. The 
                imposing music for the film was provided 
                by Mayuzumi - his only Hollywood score. 
                It was not his first film score though. 
                He wrote the first ever Japanese score 
                using electronic music in the early 
                1960s for Akasen-chitai (Red 
                District). In 1964 there was the 
                music for the film Tokyo Olympic. 
                With this he won the Mainichi Music 
                Prize. 
              
 
              
In 1987 Philips issued 
                a Mayuzumi CD (30LD-1016) coupling his 
                temple bell-inspired Nirvana Symphony 
                (1958) played by the NHK Symphony 
                Orchestra and the Japan Chorus Union 
                conducted by Yuzo Toyama with the Mandala 
                Symphony played by the same orchestra, 
                this time conducted by Kazuo Yamada. 
                Now that is a CD I would like to hear! 
              
 
              
Turning to the present 
                Naxos disc ... 
              
Symphonic Mood 
                is the most accessible music 
                here. It is distinctively French in 
                style - more Ravel than Debussy. Amongst 
                Ravel's works Ma Mère L'Oye 
                comes closest. An Oriental overlay 
                is spliced with the rhythmic violence 
                of Stravinsky's Rite and the 
                motoric impetus of Honegger's Pacific 
                231. 
              
Bugaku is 
                in two parts and is in a more advanced 
                idiom than Symphonic Mood. Its 
                ululating melismatic violins recall 
                the wails and mysticism of Hovhaness's 
                Fra Angelico overture and of 
                Penderecki's Threnody for the Victims 
                of Hiroshima. The second section 
                is memorable for thundering expressionless 
                bass drum impacts and for a return to 
                slithering melisma. Bugaku won 
                the Otaka Prize in 1967. It is part 
                of a group of works in which Mayuzumi 
                returned to the traditional roots of 
                Japanese culture - here the music of 
                the enclosed world of the Imperial Court. 
              
 
              
The Mandala Symphony 
                is quite short. It takes a step 
                out into a chilling and clamorous avant-garde 
                world. The effect is made distinctive 
                by mystical Buddhist iterative cells. 
                Then again Mayuzumi can surprise by 
                the sweetness of his ideas and treatments 
                - as in the solo violin 'song' in the 
                second movement. Mandala Symphony 
                is part of a group of Buddhist-influenced 
                works: the cantata Geka (Pratidesana), 
                Sange for male chorus, the Nirvana 
                Symphony and the symphonic poem 
                Samsara (1962). Samsara is 
                also available on CD having been recorded 
                on Marco Polo 8.220297 with Phonologie 
                Symphonique and Bacchanale. 
                Samsara is also on a First Edition 
                CD (FECD-0030) that also includes Mayuzumi's 
                Pieces for prepared piano and strings 
                (1957) and the Essay for string 
                orchestra (1963). 
              
 
              
The final work here 
                is Rumba Rhapsody. It 
                takes us back two years before Symphonic 
                Mood. Uproarious and full of eye-glinting 
                ruthless rhythmic activity it is a sort 
                of gelignite amalgam of Honegger, Stravinsky, 
                Mossolov and Markevich. Entertaining 
                stuff. 
              
 
              
A varied and striking 
                conspectus of Mayuzumi's music. Once 
                sampled I suspect most people will want 
                to try some of his other scores as well. 
              
Rob Barnett