Maki Ishii

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Kyoo 00:00 Tools
For Lily 00:00 Tools
Hamon-Ripples (For Chamber Ensemble, Violin And Taped Music) 00:00 Tools
Kyoō 00:00 Tools
Lost Sounds II, Op. 33b 00:00 Tools
Monochrome 00:00 Tools
Tango-Prism, Op. 73 00:00 Tools
Thirteen Drums for percussion solo, Op. 66 00:00 Tools
Black Intention 00:00 Tools
east - green - spring, Op. 94 00:00 Tools
Beyond a Distance, Op. 41 00:00 Tools
Cho-Etsu (1973) 00:00 Tools
Thirteen Drums, Op. 66 00:00 Tools
Aphorismen II Für Einen Pianisten 00:00 Tools
Kyou 00:00 Tools
Maki Ishii (1965) 00:00 Tools
Afro-Concerto, Op. 50 (1982) 00:00 Tools
Cho-Etsu 00:00 Tools
13 Drums, Op. 66: Thirteen Drums, Op. 66 00:00 Tools
Translucent Vision for orchestra Op. 49 (1981-82) 00:00 Tools
Lost Sounds III, Op. 34 (1978) 00:00 Tools
Symphonic Poem 'Gioh' for yoko bue (Jap. trad. flute) and orchestra Op. 60 (1984) 00:00 Tools
Thirteen Drums 00:00 Tools
Expressionen für Streichorchester Op.10 (1967) 00:00 Tools
Concertante Op. 79 00:00 Tools
Hiten-Seido II 00:00 Tools
13 Drums, Op. 66 00:00 Tools
E2 - Kyoo 00:00 Tools
Kyso-so for percussion groups and full orchestra Op. 14 (1969) 00:00 Tools
Hamon-Ripples (For Chamber Ensemble, Violin And Taped Music) (1965) 00:00 Tools
Saidoki (Demon), Op. 86 00:00 Tools
Concerto For Percussion & Orchestra Afro-Concerto Op.50 (1982) 00:00 Tools
Ko-Ku (The Void) 00:00 Tools
Hamon-Ripples 00:00 Tools
Fushi (Gestalt des Windes), Op. 84 (1989) 00:00 Tools
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Maki Ishii (石井眞木, Ishii Maki, May 28, 1936 - April 8, 2003) was a Japanese composer of contemporary classical music, and brother of composer Kan Ishii (石井歓). Born in Tokyo, he studied composition and conducting from 1952 to 1958 in Tokyo, then moved to Berlin, where he continued his studies under Boris Blacher and Josef Rufer. In 1962 he returned to Japan. His music has been performed by the taiko group Kodo and he has composed for Japanese instruments as well as symphony orchestra and other Western instruments. He died in Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan, at the Kashiwa National Cancer Center of thyroid cancer on April 8, 2003, at the age of 66. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.