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Kōsaku Yamada

was a Japanese composer and conductor.

Name

In older Western reference sources, his name is given as Kôsçak Yamada.

Biography

Born in Tokyo, Yamada started his music education at Tokyo Music School in 1904, studying there under German composers and Heinrich Werkmeister. In 1910, he left Japan for Germany where he enrolled at the Prussian Academy of Arts and learnt composition under Max Bruch and Karl Leopold Wolf and piano under Carl August Heymann-Rheineck, before returning to Japan in late 1913. He travelled to the United States in 1918 for two years. During his stay in Manhattan, New York City, he conducted a temporarily organized orchestra composed of members of New York Philharmonic and New York Symphony, short before their amalgamation.

The beginning of his Symphony in F major, "Triumph and Peace" (1912) has a pentatonic theme G-A-D-E which reflects the Japanese national anthem based on Gagaku. This symphony was the first complete symphony with four movements in Japan.

His Sinfonia "Inno Meiji" (1921) includes Japanese instruments such as the , an ancient Japanese double reed wind instrument, and other Asian instruments.

Yamada composed about 1,600 pieces of musical works, in which art songs (Lieder) amount to 700 even excluding songs commissioned by schools, municipalities and companies. Akatombo (Red Dragonfly) (1927) is perhaps his most famous song. His songs have been performed and recorded by many famous singers such as Kathleen Battle, Ernst Haefliger and Yoshikazu Mera.

Yamada's opera Kurofune (black ships) is regarded as one of the most famous Japanese operas. His work was heard at the music section of the art competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics.

As a conductor, Yamada made an effort to introduce western orchestral works to Japan. He gave the premieres, in Japan, of Debussy's Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, Gershwin's An American in Paris, Mosolov's Iron Foundry, Sibelius' Finlandia, Shostakovich's Symphony No. 1, Johann Strauss II's An der schönen blauen Donau, and Wagner's Siegfried Idyll.

Jacques Ibert's Ouverture de fête was dedicated to the Japanese emperor and government for the 2,600th National Foundation Day in 1940 and premiered under the baton of Yamada.

Yamada died at his home in Tokyo of a heart attack on December 29, 1965, and was survived by his wife, Teruko.

Major compositions

Operas

  • Ayame [Iris] (1931)
  • Kurofune [Black Ships] (1940)
  • Hsìang-fei (1946) (four acts, seven scenes with a proemnia – see Xiang Fei)

Other stage works

  • Maria Magdalena for ballet, after the drama by M. Maeterlinck (1916) (piano sketches were complete, but are now lost; the sketches were never developed)

Orchestral works

Chamber works

  • String Quartet No. 1 in F major
  • String Quartet No. 2 in G major
  • String Quartet No. 3 in C minor
  • Hochzeitsklänge for piano quintet (1913)
  • Chanson triste japonaise for violin and piano (1921)
  • Suite japonaise for violin and piano (1924)
  • Variations on Kono-michi for flute and piano (1930)

Works for piano

  • New Year's Eve (1903)
  • Variationen (1912)
  • The Chimes of the Dawn (1916)
  • Les poèmes à Scriabin (1917)
  • Karatachi-no-hana for piano solo (1928)

Choral works

  • Die Herbstfeier for mixed chorus and orchestra (1912)

Songs

  • "Song of Aiyan" (1922)
  • "Chugoku chihō no komoriuta" [Lullaby from the Chugoku Area]
  • "Karatachi no hana"
  • "Pechika"
  • "" [This Road]
  • "Akatombo" [Red Dragonfly] (1927)
  • "Yuu-in"
  • "Sabishiki Yoruno Uta" [Songs of Lonely Night] (1920)

Recordings

References

Further reading

  • Herd, Judith Ann. 1996. "Westliche Musik und die Entstehung einer japanischen Avantgarde", translated by Annemarie Guignard and Elisabeth Seebass. In Musik in Japan: Aufsätze zu Aspekten der Musik im heutigen Japan, edited by Silvain Guignard, 219–40. Munich: Iudicium, 1996.
  • Pacun, David. 2006. "Thus we cultivate our own World, thus we share it with others: Kósçak Yamada's Visit to the United States, 1918–19", American Music 24/1, 67–94.
  • Pacun, David. 2008. "Style and Politics in Kosaku Yamada's Folk Song Arrangements, 1917–1950." In Music of Japan Today edited by E. Michael Richards and Kazuko Tanosaki, (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008), 39–54.
  • (subscription access)
  • "Yamada Kōsaku", Encyclopædia Britannica

External links