Somei Satoh
Somei Satoh 佐藤 聰明 | |
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Born | Sendai, Miyagi, Japan | January 19, 1947
Occupation | Composer |
Somei Satoh (佐藤 聰明, Satō Sōmei, born January 19, 1947 in Sendai, Japan) is a Japanese composer of contemporary music. His compositions mix Japanese court music with European romanticism and electronic music.[1]
His musical career began with an experimental, mix media group called "Tone Field" in Tokyo. He studied at Nihon University of Art in the early 1970s[2] and is primarily self-taught in composition. In 1972 and 1981, Satoh produced two other experimental projects. The latter involved placing eight speakers approximately one kilometer apart on nearby mountain tops overlooking a huge valley. In 1985, he collaborated with theater designer Manuel Luetgenhorst to stage his music at The Arts at St. Ann's in Brooklyn, New York.[3]
He wrote his violin concerto for Anne Akiko Meyers.[4]
Compositions
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (June 2021) |
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Awards
[edit]- Japan Arts Festival, 1980
- Asian Cultural Council, 1983
References
[edit]- ^ Lebrecht, Norman (1996). The Companion to 20th-century Music. Da Capo Press. p. 301. ISBN 9780306807343.
- ^ "Somei Satoh Profile". Mode Records. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
- ^ "Somei Satoh".
- ^ "Goddess of Fire" (PDF). Muso. Winter 05/06 (7): 12.
External links
[edit]- Somei Satoh (Zen-On Contemporary Composers)
- Somei Satoh page from Lovely Music, Ltd. site
- Recitative recorded by Guy Klucevsek
- 1947 births
- 20th-century Japanese classical composers
- 20th-century Japanese male musicians
- 21st-century Japanese classical composers
- 21st-century Japanese male musicians
- Contemporary classical music performers
- Japanese contemporary classical composers
- Japanese male classical composers
- Living people
- Musicians from Sendai
- Nihon University alumni
- Japanese composer stubs
- Japanese musician stubs