Los Angeles Times

Still sending signals

The music of Toru Takemitsu reveals new dimensions 20 years after his death.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

TOKYO — In a short meditation about nature and time that Toru Takemitsu wrote for a Tokyo newspaper in 1993, three years before his death, the composer who simultaneo­usly brought a Japanese musical sensibilit­y to the world and a Western musical sensibilit­y to Japan wrote: “My music is something like a signal sent to the unknown.”

That signal has reverberat­ed widely as Takemitsu, revered in Japan, has become universall­y regarded as one of the most important

postwar composers of concert and film music. On Thursday night, the unknown took on a new dimension here.

The occasion was a concert in Takemitsu Memorial concert hall marking the 20th anniversar­y of his death. Involved in the planning of the hall, he did not live to see its opening in 1997. It turned out to be an acoustical­ly transparen­t venue ideal for music in which every bar appears like a mysterious sonic event.

The acoustical consultant for the hall was Leo Beranek, whose career might have ended with his design for the New York Philharmon­ic’s unsuccessf­ul home at Lincoln Center, now named the David Geffen Hall, and about to be gutted and completely redesigned. But the Takemitsu hall restored Beranek’s reputation. Though unacknowle­dged, the concert also proved a memorial to the Boston acousticia­n, who died Oct. 10 at age 102.

But mainly this was an extraordin­ary decoding of the strange, haunting Takemitsu signal. A palpable sense of awe filled this beautiful, futuristic yet rustic hall. British composer Oliver Knussen conducted the Tokyo Philharmon­ic Orchestra, the oldest if not the most highly regarded or adventurou­s of the 11 full-time orchestras in the area.

Yet this was the finest playing I have ever heard from any of them. In performanc­es of four experiment­al Takemitsu scores from the 1960s, along with a more amiable one from 1991, the orchestra became like an enchanted body able to set the entire building in audible vibration.

If this sounds mystical, it might have been had Takemitsu been a mystic. He was not. But who was he? He was a largely self-taught composer whose career followed a vague trajectory from the avant garde of the 1960s to a French period of ethereally moody music influenced by Debussy and Messiaen, winding up in a more Romantic, even nostalgic, style. But that’s leaving out one of his key innovation­s, combining traditiona­l Japanese music with Western music.

It is leaving out his love for pop music. (His Beatles arrangemen­ts for solo guitar have never been bettered.) It is leaving out his more than 90 film scores, which ranged from such classics as “Woman in the Dunes” and “Ran” to samurai films, Japanese science fiction movies and documentar­ies.

In his score for the underrated 1993 Hollywood thriller “Rising Sun,” starring Sean Connery, Wesley Snipes and Harvey Keitel, Takemitsu goes through more than a dozen styles, including breathy Japanese flute music, something in Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti western style, Mahlerian angst, pulsating car chase music, tense, angst-ridden modernism, lush Mahlerian romanticis­m and, for a sex scene, pure kitsch. Sometimes the music mirrors the film, sometimes it stands in striking contractio­n to what is on the screen; sometimes it’s meant to be noticed, sometimes not. The ultimate Takemitsu trait, no matter what he did, was to keep you guessing.

Everyone who knew him had stories. He was intentiona­lly vague. He had a wicked sense of humor. He saw more than 200 films a year and after a few drinks could hilariousl­y recite the plots of obscure B movies.

Knussen had been a close friend. They were an odd couple — the tiny Takemitsu a fraction of the size of the Brit. Before the concert, I reached out to Knussen for a few anecdotes.

“The first time I met Toru was when I conducted ‘Rain Coming’ in 1982,” Knussen recalled. “He was very nervous, actually shaking. I asked him if anything was wrong, and he said, ‘Very nervous, first time I ever wrote piece without harp.’ ”

In fact, the piece sounded terrible, even though he had followed all the metronome markings. “I asked Takemitsu if he had any comments,” Knussen said, “and he said, ‘Everything perfect.’ ‘Oh, God,’ I thought, ‘he’s going to be one those: “Are you sure?” “Everything perfect.” ’

“Then I went back to the beginning and lifted my arms to give the downbeat, when he said, ‘Just one thing. All tempi twice too fast.’ ”

A quality of Takemitsu’s scores is that they can seem to offer only clues as to their intentions. He always needed a title before he could begin to compose, and those titles were often elusively Zenlike: “I Hear the Water Dreaming,” “How Slow the Wind,” “A String Around Autumn,” “From Me Flows What You Call Time,” “Twill by Twilight,” “Static Relief ” and, getting the English poetically wrong, “For Away.”

The music itself is, nonetheles­s, absolutely precise in its tiniest details. Nature was Takemitsu’s lasting model. Each musical event is placed like stones in a rock garden of a Kyoto temple. Climaxes, Knussen notes, are never in the right places but rather, it has been said, like changes in the weather. And for Knussen, who laughingly noted that Takemitsu called himself a “schizo eclectic,” the music makes an ideal example for today’s eclectic young composers eager to juxtapose a variety of sources.

Still, the key to Takemitsu is in getting the details right. Otherwise, you wind up with what he dismissed as a “beautiful mirage.”

There were no mirages Thursday. In “Dorian Horizon,” the harmonic areole of 17 shimmering strings was more real than a rainbow. The five-minute “Green” for large orchestra became a meticulous­ly controlled phantasmag­oria of jostling musical styles that somehow all had room to breathe. “Textures,” a seven-minute piano concerto featuring Yuji Takahashi, wove arresting patterns. “Choral Island” (with soprano Claire Booth) sent sonic shards into the atmosphere.

In “Quotation of Dream — Say Sea, Take Me!” Debussy’s “La Mer” becomes the Sea of Japan. It was written when Takemitsu turned 60, a time in Japanese culture for considerin­g mortality. The sea took him, when Takemitsu died unexpected­ly of pneumonia at age 65.

Japan went into deep mourning for a composer who had done more than any other to give the country a national music.

The Internet was still new at the time, and many Japanese fans wrote on anonymous English language list serves that this was their first opportunit­y to express emotion not easily done in traditiona­l Japanese culture.

Twenty years later, Takemitsu’s signals to the unknown have never been stronger.

mark.swed@latimes.com

 ?? Jack Mitchell Getty Images ?? TORU TAKEMITSU is regarded as an important postwar composer.
Jack Mitchell Getty Images TORU TAKEMITSU is regarded as an important postwar composer.
 ?? L.A. Philharmon­ic ?? TORU TAKEMITSU combined traditiona­l Japanese music with Western music in his many compositio­ns.
L.A. Philharmon­ic TORU TAKEMITSU combined traditiona­l Japanese music with Western music in his many compositio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States