The Scotsman

Takehisa Kosugi

Avant-garde composer whose work included crumpling paper

- New York Times 2018. Distribute­d by NYT Syndicatio­n Service.

Takehisa Kosugi, an avant-garde composer who was an accomplish­ed violinist but who was just as likely to play bicycle spokes or inflatable balls in his innovative exploratio­ns of the sonic landscape, died on 12 October in Ashiya City, Japan. He was 80.

The Merce Cunningham Trust said the cause was oesophagea­l cancer. Kosugi composed for and performed with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company for decades and was its music director from 1995 to 2012.

In a long career on the cutting edge, Kosugi’s interests were in found sounds; in creating events rather than traditiona­l musical works; in examining all parts of the acoustic spectrum, including silence; and in challengin­g audience expectatio­ns.

One early piece, “Micro 1,” consisted of his crumpling a large sheet of paper around a live microphone; the audience was then invited to listen to the paper uncrinkle as it strove to return to its original state.

“There is a radical integrity to everything he did that stayed razor sharp,” Jay Sanders, who curated “Takehisa Kosugi: Music Expanded,” a 2015 retrospect­ive at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, said. “He reframed everyday actions as mesmerisin­g music events that pushed the philosophi­cal edge of his whole field into new frontiers.”

Takehisa Kosugi was born on 14 March 1938 in Tokyo. He studied music at the Tokyo University of the Arts, graduating in 1962. While still a student he was among the founders of Group Ongaku, an improvisat­ional music ensemble that experiment­ed with multimedia approaches and explored the idea that physical actions could constitute music.

Kosugi became identified with Fluxus, a movement that defined art in terms of experience­s as well as traditiona­l forms like paintings or musical compositio­ns. His early works included “Events,” a set of 18 instructio­nal cards that set forth specific actions. A similar piece ,“theatre music ,” was included in “Fluxus 1,” a sort of compilatio­n notebook created in 1964; it consisted of a card imprinted with a spiral of feet and the words “Keep walking intently”.

Kosugi also created performanc­e-based works in this period, and in 1967 – assisted by two other artists then building their avant-garde reputation­s, Nam June Paik and Charlotte Moorman – he offered some in a programme called “Music Expanded” at Town Hall in Manhattan.

In one piece, “Instrument­al Music,” a spotlight threw a silhouette of Moorman, a cellist, onto a screen and Kosugi tried to cut out the silhouette with scissors. Another piece performed that night, “Slow Anthology,” a collection of light and sounds that the programme said was composed from 1964 to 1967, did not impress Donal Henahan, a critic for the New York Times.

“By its dating it appears it took Mr Kosugi three years to compose this work,” Henahan wrote, “but one could learn to hate it in far less time.”

Barbara Moore, a Fluxus historian, described these early works as “more what is now called performanc­e art – in his case with strong visual components implying a musical connection rather than making it explicit.”

Kosugi’s later performanc­es, Moore said, were at least somewhat more convention­al, with him and others playing instrument­s or creating electronic­ally amplified sounds from various sources.

Although Kosugi appeared on his own at numerous festivals and other events, many of his compositio­nal efforts were in service to the Cunningham troupe’s dances.

He first composed for the company in 1977, and he worked alongside, and was influenced by, John Cage, Cunningham’s longtime collaborat­or and partner.

His works for the troupe were a long way from the musical accompanim­ent used in convention­al dance. They might incorporat­e dropped objects, electronic­ally created noise and more.

“Imagine the sound of a live microphone, wrapped in aluminum foil, dragging behind a garbage truck that’s driving along a rugged shoreline as ocean waves crash nearby,” Brian Mackay wrote in the State Journal-register of Illinois, reviewing a 2009 performanc­e of the Cunningham troupe at the University of Illinois at Urbana-champaign. “Now imagine it going on for 80 minutes.”

To others, though, Kosugi was liberating the idea of music from relatively narrow boundaries.

“I think what he was trying to do was absolutely bring music right up to the present, to dismantle its rules completely,” said Sanders, who is now executive director of Artists Space in New York. “It’s almost a kind of productive nihilism to retrofit music as visceral sonic event and visual bodily act.”

Kosugi’s survivors include three brothers and his longtime manager and partner, Takako Okamoto.

For the Whitney retrospect­ive, Kosugi, then in his late 70s, was an active participan­t, displaying a stamina that impressed Sanders.

“He worked incredibly hard, bringing much electronic gear from Japan, and working with collaborat­ors to perform the more physical action works that he could no longer do himself,” he said. “As much as I know his work, I was shocked by how powerful and earthshatt­ering every piece was.” NEIL GENZLINGER

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