Somei Satoh

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Birds in Warped Time II 11:10 Tools
Bifu 00:00 Tools
Mantra 23:02 Tools
Mandara 19:10 Tools
Kisetsu 14:20 Tools
Tantra 22:55 Tools
Mantra, Organics 00:00 Tools
Wind 10:23 Tools
Mantra for voice and electroni 00:00 Tools
Moon 15:12 Tools
Sun 18:07 Tools
Incarnation II 06:59 Tools
Stabat Mater for soprano, Jane 15:12 Tools
Ruika 00:00 Tools
Toward the Night 14:37 Tools
Organics 04:45 Tools
Homa 14:27 Tools
Litania 13:05 Tools
Satoh: Bifu 13:05 Tools
Homa: 1988 14:25 Tools
Toward the Night: 1991 14:33 Tools
From The Depth Of Silence 12:38 Tools
Ruika: 1990 20:30 Tools
Toki No Mon: A Gate into Infinity) / Somei Satoh/Abel Steinberg Winant Trio 14:41 Tools
Kyokoku 23:58 Tools
Violin Concerto 25:26 Tools
The Heavenly Spheres are Illuminated by Lights 11:50 Tools
Mandara (1982) 19:14 Tools
Stabat Mater 33:35 Tools
A Gate into the Stars 00:00 Tools
Kougetsu (Moon) 15:13 Tools
Toki No Mon 00:00 Tools
Kaze No Kyoku (Wind) 05:48 Tools
Mantra/Organics 04:46 Tools
Burning Meditation 12:10 Tools
birds in warped time II (1980) 11:10 Tools
Mantra w. Michael Stearns - Organics 04:46 Tools
Mantra (1986) 23:08 Tools
Mirror 13:42 Tools
Tantra (1990) 23:00 Tools
Sanyo (Sun) 18:13 Tools
Hikari 10:25 Tools
Litania (1973) 13:05 Tools
Mantra / Organics 04:45 Tools
Hymn for the sun 24:33 Tools
The Heavenly Spheres Are Illuminated By Lights (1979) 11:50 Tools
Emerald Tablet (1978) 24:33 Tools
Mantra/Stabat Mater from The Arts at St. Ann's 06:26 Tools
Ruika (1990) 20:35 Tools
1.A Mantra 1.B Organics 04:45 Tools
Homa (1988) 04:45 Tools
Toward the Night (1991) 14:36 Tools
Echoes (1981) 11:09 Tools
Incarnation II (1970) 10:08 Tools
Mantra / Stabat Mater 10:08 Tools
Cosmic Womb 12:01 Tools
Burning Meditation (Version for Voice & String Orchestra) 12:01 Tools
1 The Heavenly Spheres Are Illuminated By Lights 11:50 Tools
4 A Gate Into The Stars 08:20 Tools
Emerald Tablet 15:16 Tools
Stabat Mater (-1- 11.25 / -2- 14.45 / -3- 7.19) 11:50 Tools
2 Birds In Warped Time II 11:09 Tools
Music of the Winds 12:01 Tools
Organics - Mantra 04:45 Tools
A Gate Into The Stars (1982) 08:20 Tools
01 -Mandara 04:46 Tools
Echoes 10:25 Tools
Mantra - Organics 04:46 Tools
Mantra-Organics 04:46 Tools
kaze no kyoku 10:25 Tools
Incarnation Ii (1977) 04:46 Tools
02 -Mantra 04:46 Tools
kougetsu 15:16 Tools
Birds In Warped Time II - Somei Satoh 04:46 Tools
Mandala 14:20 Tools
03 -Tantra 10:25 Tools
Mantra Organics 10:25 Tools
Kougetsu [Moon] 15:14 Tools
3 Incarnation II 18:22 Tools
Birds In Warped Time II: 1980 00:00 Tools
Kisetsu (1999) 14:20 Tools
Mantra / Michael Stearns - Organics 14:20 Tools
Listening to fragrances of the Dusk, for strings 14:20 Tools
Bifu for violin & piano 14:20 Tools
Kyokoku (1991) 14:20 Tools
Toki No Mon "A Gate Into Infinity" 14:20 Tools
Sumeru 14:20 Tools
Mantra (1983) 14:20 Tools
Cosmic Womb (1975) 14:20 Tools
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Somei Satoh (SATOH Somei 佐藤聰明) was born in 1947 in Sendai (northern Honshu), Japan. He began his career in 1969 with "Tone Field," an experimental, mixed media group based in Tokyo. In 1972 he produced "Global Vision," a multimedia arts festival, that encompassed musical events, works by visual artists and improvisational performance groups. In one of his most interesting projects held at a hot springs resort in Tochigi Prefecture in 1981, Satoh places eight speakers approximately one kilometer apart on mountain tops overlooking a huge valley. As a man-made fog rose from below, the music from the speakers combined with laser beams and moved the clouds into various formations. Satoh has collaborated twice since 1985 with theater designer, Manuel Luetgenhorst in dramatic stagings of his music at The Arts at St. Ann's in Brooklyn, New York. Satoh was awarded the Japan Arts Festival prize in 1980 and received a visiting artist grant from the Asian Cultural Council in 1983, enabling him to spend one year in the United States. He has written more than thirty compositions, including works for piano, orchestra, chamber music, choral and electronic music, theater pieces and music for traditional Japanese instruments. Somei Satoh is a composer of the post-war generation whose hauntingly evocative musical language is a curious fusion of Japanese timbral sensibilities with 19th century Romanticism and electronic technology. He has been deeply influenced by Shintoism, the writings of the Zen Buddhist scholar DT Suzuki, his Japanese cultural heritage as well as the multimedia art forms of the sixties. Satoh's elegant and passionate style convincingly integrates these diverse elements into an inimitably individual approach to contemporary Japanese music. Like Toshiro Mayazumi an Toru Takemitsu, the most well-known of contemporaryJapanese composers outside Japan today, Satoh has succeeded in reshaping his native musical resources in synthesis with Western forms and instrumental sonorities. His work cannot, however, be considered within the mainstream of contemporary Japanese art music, for he writes in an unreservedly non- international style, remarkably free from any constraints of academism. This may be attributed to the fact that being primarily self-taught, he has never been subjected to a formal musical education. Satoh has on occasion, been referred to as a composer of gendai hogaku (contemporary traditional music). Much as Satoh is reluctant to be so classified, this assessment of his writing has some validity if one views him as reworking the traditional Japanese musical aesthetic in a broader, abstract context infusing it with a new vitality. Minimalism, that Eastern-derived Western phenomenon born of the sixties, has much in common with the hypnotic, regular pulsations of rock. "Litania" and "Incarnation II", among others of Satoh's compositions which rely primarily on the prolongation of a single unit of sound, draw upon this repetitive element. In Satoh's case, however, the repetitions are perceived more as vibrations because of the rapidity of the individual beats in conjunction with an extremely slow overall pulse. This creates the sensation of being in a rhythmic limbo, caught in a framework of suspended time which is typically Japanese. This experience can be summed up in the Japanese word 'ma' which may be defined as the natural distance between two or more events existing in a continuity. In contrast to the West's perception of time and space as separate entities, in Japanese thinking both time and space are measured in terms of intervals. It is the coincidental conceptualization of these elements which is perhaps the main feature distinguishing Japan's artistic expression from that of the West. In Satoh's own words, My music is limited to certain elements of sound and there are many calm repetitions. There is also much prolongation of a single sound. I think silence and the prolongation of sound is the same thing in terms of space. The only difference is that there is either the presence or absence of sound. More important is whether the space is "living" or not. Our [Japanese] sense of time and space is different from that of the West. For example, in the Shinto religion, there is the term 'imanaka' which is not just the present moment which lies between the stretch of past eternity and future immortality, but also the manifestation of the moment of all time which is multi-layered and multi-dimensional .... I would like it if the listener could abandon all previous conceptions of time and experience a new sense of time presented in this music as if eternal time can be lived in a single moment. (from the liner notes by Margaret Leng Tan to New Albion's release, "Litania" NA008) Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.