武満 徹のピアノ・アンサンブル作品に関する一考察
広島大学大学院教育学研究科紀要. 第二部, 文化教育開発関連領域 Issue 52
Page 345-351
published_at 2004-03-28
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この文献の参照には次のURLをご利用ください : https://doi.org/10.15027/18238
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Title ( jpn ) |
武満 徹のピアノ・アンサンブル作品に関する一考察
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Title ( eng ) |
A study concerning piano ensemble works of Toru Takemitsu
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Creator |
Hamamoto Yoshiyasu
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Source Title |
広島大学大学院教育学研究科紀要. 第二部, 文化教育開発関連領域
Bulletin of the Graduate School of Education, Hiroshima University. Part. II, Arts and science education
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Issue | 52 |
Start Page | 345 |
End Page | 351 |
Abstract |
Among the many piano works by Japanese composers that I have performed, I find a unique sense of sound in the works of Toru Takemitsu. Amid the contemporary trend towards ever greater diversification of sound, his works seem to have been constructed in resolute pursuit of what might be termed 'active space'. Although contact between Takemitsu and many of the avant-garde generation beginning with John Cage was close and extensive, there was a considerable gap between the kinds of 'resonance' they sought. Takemitsu's works give consistent evidence to his commitment to 'sounding across the air', the idea that the gathering of resonance occurs precisely in a momentary insight. Takemitsu, of course, also put his hand to electronic music and theater pieces, but in the end these were not genres that he took to. They were too different from 'sound' realized in unforeseen present.
With the piano solo works Lent in Due Movimenti (1950) and Uninterrupted Rest (1951), Takemitsu leapt into the limelight, subsequently producing a stylistically varied body of works. In this study, I have focused on representative works for piano solo and for piano in ensemble, considering the kind of 'resonance' Takemitsu sought from the viewpoint of the performer and the 'idiom' on which his works are founded, rather than 'pianism' or 'technique' The piano is in sense a perfect musical instrument, yielding maximum effect with great economy of means. At the same time, the piano is therefore also a highly rationalized and standardized instrument. It is nonetheless inconceivable that the piano fall into desuetude or that composers cease to write for this instrument. Rather, composers of this century are faced with the challenge of discovering how the piano can be played in order to produce a 'resonance' that is uniquely their own. Taking such contradictions and challenges into consideration and bringing various contemporary ideas to bear on the question, I have sought to demonstrate in this study how an original sense of 'resonance' can be found in the piano works of Toru Takemitsu. |
Keywords |
音の響き
邦人作曲家
ピアノ・アンサンブル
Resonance
Japanese composers
Piano ensemble
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NDC |
Music [ 760 ]
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Language |
jpn
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Resource Type | departmental bulletin paper |
Publisher |
広島大学大学院教育学研究科
国立情報学研究所
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Date of Issued | 2004-03-28 |
Publish Type | Version of Record |
Access Rights | open access |
Source Identifier |
[ISSN] 1346-5546
[NCID] AA11618725
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