Texarkana Gazette

Japanese avant-garde pioneer composer Ichiyanagi dies at 89

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TOKYO — Avant-garde pianist and composer Toshi Ichiyanagi, who studied with John Cage and went on to lead Japan’s advances in experiment­al modern music, has died. He was 89.

Ichiyanagi, who was married to Yoko Ono before she married John Lennon, died Friday, according to the Kanagawa Arts Foundation, where Ichiyanagi had served as general artistic director. The cause of death was not given.

“We would like to express our sincerest gratitude to all those who loved him during his lifetime,” the foundation’s chairman, Kazumi Tamamura, said in a statement Saturday.

Ichiyanagi studied at The Juilliard School in New York and emerged a pioneer, using free-spirited compositio­nal techniques that left much to chance, incorporat­ing not only traditiona­l Japanese elements and instrument­s but also electronic music.

He was known for collaborat­ions that defied the boundaries of genres, working with Jasper Johns and Merce Cunningham, as well as innovative Japanese artists like architect Kisho Kurokawa and poet-playwright Shuji Terayama, as well as with Ono, with whom he was married for several years starting in the mid-1950s.

“In my creation, I have been trying to let various elements, which have often been considered separately as contrast and opposite in music, coexist and penetrate each other,” Ichiyanagi once said in an artist statement.

Japanese traditiona­l music inspired and emboldened him, he said, because it was not preoccupie­d with the usual definition­s of music as “temporal art,” or what he called “divisions,” such as relative and absolute, or new and old.

Modern music was more about “substantia­l space, in order to restore the spiritual richness that music provides,” he said.

Among his well-known works for orchestra is his turbulentl­y provocativ­e “Berlin Renshi.” Renshi is a kind of Japanese collaborat­ive poetry that is more open-ended free verse than older forms like “renku.”

In 1989, Ichiyanagi formed the Tokyo Internatio­nal Music Ensemble — The New Tradition (TIME), an orchestral group focused on traditiona­l instrument­s and “shomyo,” a style of Buddhist chanting.

His music traveled freely across influences and cultures, transition­ing seamlessly from minimalist avant-garde to Western opera.

Ichiyanagi toured around the world, premiering his compositio­ns at Carnegie Hall in New York and the Théâtre des Champs-élysées, Paris. The National Theater of Japan also commission­ed him for several works. He remained prolific over the years, producing Concerto for marimba and orchestra in 2013, and Piano Concerto No. 6 in 2016, which Ichiyanagi performed solo at a Tokyo festival.

Ichiyanagi received numerous awards, including the Alexander Gretchanin­ov Prize from Juilliard, L’ordre des Arts et des Lettres of the French Republic and the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette and the Medal of Purple Ribbon from the Japanese government.

Born in Kobe to a musical family, Ichiyanagi showed promise as a composer at a young age. He won a major competitio­n in Japan before moving to the U.S. as a teen, when such moves were still relatively rare in postwar Japan.

A private funeral is being held with family. A public ceremony in his honor is in the works, being arranged by his son, Japanese media reports said.

 ?? Kyodo News via AP ?? ■ Japanese pianist and composer Toshi Ichiyanagi speaks in an interview in Tokyo, Sept. 2018. Avant-garde pianist and composer Ichiyanagi, who studied with John Cage and went on to lead Japan’s advances in experiment­al modern music, has died. He was 89.
Kyodo News via AP ■ Japanese pianist and composer Toshi Ichiyanagi speaks in an interview in Tokyo, Sept. 2018. Avant-garde pianist and composer Ichiyanagi, who studied with John Cage and went on to lead Japan’s advances in experiment­al modern music, has died. He was 89.

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