词条 | Takehisa Kosugi |
释义 |
| name = Takehisa Kosugi | image = | image_size = | caption = | birth_date = {{birth date|1938|3|24}} | birth_place = Tokyo, Japan | death_date = {{death date and age|2018|10|12|1938|3|14}}[1] | death_place = | restingplace = | native_name = 小杉 武久 | native_name_lang = ja | occupation = Composer, violinist | yearsactive = | spouse = | Relatives = }}{{Nihongo|Takehisa Kosugi|小杉 武久|Kosugi Takehisa|March 24, 1938 – October 12, 2018}} was a Japanese composer and violinist associated with the Fluxus movement. BiographyKosugi studied musicology at the Tokyo University of the Arts and graduated in 1962. Kosugi is probably best known for the experimental music that he created in from 1960 until 1975, first in the early 1960s with the Tokyo-based seven-member ensemble Group Ongaku (music group) and thereafter as a solo artist and with itinerant octet Taj Mahal Travellers (1969–75). Kosugi's primary instrument was the violin, which he sent through various echo-chambers and effects to create a bizarre, jolting music quite at odds with the drones of other more well-known Fluxus artists, such as Tony Conrad, John Cale and Henry Flynt. In 1963 Kosugi composed for Fluxus 1 a musical piece called Theatre Music in the form of a rectangle of cardstock that bore the trace of a spiral of moving feet. This was paired with the instructions: "Keep walking intently". Beginning in 1995, Kosugi served as music director for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, and lived in Osaka, Japan. His 1960s career with Group Ongaku is extensively explained in the 32-page essay "Experimental Japan," which appears in the book Japrocksampler (Bloomsbury, 2007), by author/musician/occultist Julian Cope. The book also features a detailed 12-page biography of Kosugi's Taj Mahal Travellers, the music of which Julian Cope describes as being "reminiscent of the creaking rigging of the un-manned Mary Celeste". According to Cope, Kosugi's finest work is the 1975 solo album Catch-wave (CBS/Sony). Kosugi received grants from The JDR 3rd Fund in 1966 and 1977. He also received a DAAD fellowship grant to reside in West Berlin in 1981. Kosugi received a John Cage Award for Music from Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts in 1994. Works
Festival performances
Sound installations
External links
References1. ^[https://www.artforum.com/news/takehisa-kosugi-1938-2018-77078 Artforum] {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Kosugi, Takehisa}} 15 : 1938 births|2018 deaths|20th-century classical composers|20th-century Japanese composers|21st-century classical composers|21st-century Japanese composers|Contemporary classical composers|Contemporary classical music performers|Fluxus|Japanese classical composers|Japanese male classical composers|People from Tokyo|Sound artists|20th-century male musicians|21st-century male musicians |
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