was a Japanese composer.
Life
Moroi was self-taught in composition while studying at the Tokyo Imperial University before moving in 1932 to Germany to study in the Berlin Musikhochschule under Leo Schrattenholz and Walter Gmeindl. While Moroi had been active in the Tokyo musical scene, forming with other colleagues a society named Surya, he claimed that his creative life truly started from his Berlin days. Returning to Japan in 1934, he built a successful career in subsequent years. His work was part of the music event in the art competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics.
Soon after completing his Symphony No. 3 in 1944 he was called up by the Japanese Army to serve in the Second World War. Following the country's surrender he focused on teaching and writing books on music theory, composing just eight works in the following three decades, including two more symphonies. In his last works he turned to the twelve-tone system.
Pupils of Moroi include Ikuma Dan, Toriro Miki, Toshiharu Ichikawa (å¸Âå·Âé½å¿ÂæÂÂ¥), YoshirÃ
 Irino, Kunio Toda (æÂ¸ç°é¦éÂÂ), Minao Shibata, SÃ
Âkichi Ozaki (å°¾å´Âå®ÂÃ¥ÂÂ), Akio Yashiro, ChÃ
«ji Kinoshita (æÂ¨ä¸Âå¿ å¸), and Im Won-sik. His son Makoto Moroi was also a composer.
List of works
Orchestral
- Symphonic Fragments (交é¿çÂÂæÂÂç« KÃ
ÂkyÃ
Âteki danshÃ
Â) (1928); formerly Op. 19
- Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 8 (1933)
- Symphony No. 2, Op. 16 (1937âÂÂ1938)
- Imperial Army Ode (çÂÂè»Âé ÂæÂ KÃ
Âgun shÃ
Âka), Symphonic Poem (1942)
: 3. Banri no soto (èÂŽÂÂã®å¤Â)
- Two Symphonic Movements (交é¿çÂÂäºÂ楽章KÃ
ÂkyÃ
Âteki ni gakushÃ
Â), Op. 22 (1942)
- The Admiral, Killed in Action (æÂÂç£æÂ¦æÂ» Teitoku senshi), Symphonic Poem (1943)
- Praise the Dawn (é»ÂæÂÂãÂÂè®Âãµ Reimei wo tatau), Symphonic Fantasy in C major (1943)
- Sinfonietta for Children (ãÂÂã©ãÂÂã®ãÂÂãÂÂã®å°Â交é¿æÂ² Kodomo no tame no shÃ
Â-kÃ
ÂkyÃ
Âkyoku) in B, Op. 24 (1943)
- Symphony No. 3, Op. 25 (1943âÂÂ1944)
- Ovation on Toward Victory (Ã¥ÂÂå©ã¸ã®æÂÂå¼ ShÃ
Âri e no kanko), Overture (1944)
- Symphony No. 4, Op. 27 (1951)
- Symphony No. 5 "Academic Festival Symphony" (大å¦ç¥ÂÃ¥Â
¸äº¤é¿æÂ² Daigaku shukuten kÃ
ÂkyÃ
Âkyoku), Op. 29 (1970)
Concertante
- Concerto in F minor for piano and orchestra (1927); formerly Op. 6
- Concerto No. 1 in C major for piano and orchestra, Op. 7 (1933)
- Concerto for cello and orchestra, Op. 12 (1936)
- Concerto for bassoon and orchestra, Op. 14 (1937); lost
- Concerto for violin and orchestra, Op. 18 (1939)
- Allegro (ã¢ã‹°ãÂÂ) for piano and orchestra, Op. 26 (1947)
- Concerto No. 2 for piano and orchestra, Op. 31 (1977)
Chamber
- Sonata No. 1 for cello and piano (1927)
- Piano Trio in B minor (1927)
- Sonata No. 1 for violin and piano (1927)
- Sonata No. 2 for cello and piano (1928)
- Sonata No. 3 for cello and piano (1929)
- Sonata No. 2 for violin and piano (1929)
- Piano Quintet (1930)
- String Quartet, Op. 6 (1933)
- Piano Quartet, Op. 9 (1934)
- Sonata for viola and piano, Op. 11 (1935)
- Trio for cello, viola da gamba and harpsichord, Op. 13 (1936)
- Sonata for flute and piano, Op. 15 (1937)
- String Sextet, Op. 17 (1939)
- String Trio, Op. 19 (1939)
- Sonata for horn and piano, Op. 32 (1977)
Piano
Moroi composed a total of ten sonatas for piano: three early sonatas, five numbered sonatas written between 1927 and 1931, and a second set of two numbered sonatas with opus numbers written in 1933 and 1939.
- Sonata (1920)
- Sonata (1922)
- Sonata in D minor (1923)
- Sonata No. 1 in D major (1927)
- Sonata No. 2 in A minor (1927)
- Sonata No. 3 (1928)
- Sonata No. 4 (1929)
- Prelude (Ã¥ÂÂå¥ÂæÂ² ZensÃ
Âkyoku) (1930)
- Sonata No. 5 (1931)
- Sonata No. 1, Op. 5 (1933)
- Sonata No. 2, Op. 20 (1939)
- Suite for Piano (ãÂÂã¢ãÂÂã®ãÂÂãÂÂã®çµÂæÂ² Piano no tame no kumikyoku) (1942)
- Preludio and Allegro giocoso (Ã¥ÂÂå¥ÂæÂ²ã¨ã¢ã‹°ãÂÂãÂȋ¸ã§ã³ã¼ã½) (1971)
Choral
- Prayer for Peace (å¹³åÂÂã®ç¥Âã Heiwa no inori), Cantata (1950)
- A Visit of the Sun (太é½ã®ãÂÂã¨ãÂÂã TaiyÃ
 no otozure), Fantasy-Oratorio for baritone, female chorus and orchestra, Op. 28 (1968)
Vocal
- Kokyoku (å°ÂæÂ²) for voice and piano (1926); words by Atsuo Ã
Âki (大æÂ¨æÂÂ夫)
- The Boy (å°Âå¹´ ShÃ
Ânen) for voice and piano (1926); words by Tatsuji Miyoshi
- Wind, Light, Leaves (風ãÂÂÃ¥Â
ÂãÂÂæÂ¨ã®è Kaze, hikari, konoha) for voice and piano (1926); words by Atsuo Ã
Âki (大æÂ¨æÂÂ夫)
- Ginkgo Tree (Ã¥Â
ŒÂ«æ¨¹ IchÃ
Â) for voice and piano (1927); words by Shigeo Inoue (äºÂä¸ÂæÂÂå¤ÂéÂÂ)
- The Deathbed (è¨絠RinjÃ
«) for voice and cello (1928); words by ChÃ
«ya Nakahara
- Morning Song (æÂÂã®æÂ Asa no uta) for voice and cello (1928); words by ChÃ
«ya Nakahara
- Munashiki aki (空ãÂÂãÂÂç§Â) for voice and piano (1929); words by ChÃ
«ya Nakahara
- The Pram (ä¹³æ¯Âè» Ubaguruma) for voice and piano (1931); words by Tatsuji Miyoshi
- Two Songs (2ã¤ã®æÂÂæÂ² Futatsu no kakyoku) for soprano and orchestra, Op. 10 (1935); words by ChÃ
«ya Nakahara
# Spring and Baby (æÂ¥ã¨赤ãÂÂå Haru to akanbÃ
Â)
# My Sister (妹ã Imo yo)
- TÃ
Âki yama miyu (é ãÂÂå±±è¦ÂãÂÂ) for voice and piano, Op. 33 (1977); words by Tatsuji Miyoshi
References
- Notes by Morihide Katayama from the Naxos Records release of Moroi's Symphony No. 3, Two Symphonic Movements and Sinfonietta.
External links