Mono-Prism, op.29

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Maki Ishii


General Info

Year: 1976
Duration: c.23:00
Difficulty: (see Ratings for explanation)
Publisher: Moeck
Cost: Score and Parts - $0.00   |   Score Only - $0.00


Instrumentation

Soloist

Player 1 - 7: Taiko (7 Shime-Daiko & 1 Ō-Daiko & 3 Chichibu-Daiko)

Orchestra

Premiere Details

Year: 1976
Place: Tanglewood, Massachusetts,
Director: Seiji Ozawa
Soloists: Ondeko-Za

Program Notes

«The almost inaudible sounds produced by the Japanese drums at the beginning of Mono-Prism represent a challenge to the traditions of East Asian drumming. What will emerge from these whisperings at the verge of audibility? Quiet and ethereal sounds have had no place in the drumming traditions of East Asia. Drums have been used traditionally in the context of religious festivals, their function being to disturb heaven and earth with their powerful sound and dynamism, and to awake sprits.

«As a player continues to strike his drum to the ultimate degree, so the sound of the instrument as produced through human agency (jinrai, "music of man") transforms into a sound as produced by nature (chirai, "music of earth"). Successions of sounds produced at an extremely high dynamic level still the passage of time and give rise to new sounds. The orchestral attacks threaten to interrupt the sense of condensed time, the accumulated resonance.

«Western sound produced through human agency here blends with the palpitations of nature: the sound of wind coming into contact with trees, the sound of flames blazing.

«The Chinese Taoist of philosopher Zhuangzi divided sound into three categories. Renlai (Jap. jinrai, "music of man") refers to the sound produced by blowing a series of flutes, and by extension to the sound produced by human begins employing musical instruments. Renlai is thus the sound which emerges through the relationship between man and musical instruments. In contrast, dirai (Jap. chirai, "music of earth") is the sound produces by the wind as it rushes through the tops of trees. It is also the roar which emerges as the wind blows into hollows and cavities of huge trees. Whereas these two types of sound are created through the agency of man and of nature respectively, tianlai (Jap. tenrai, "music of heaven") is the elemental force which rouses these two types of sound into action. Tianlai is thus a nation of music which transcends the distinction between "music of man" and "music of earth" and is more profound than either. The "music of heaven" is thus the voice and the palpitations of nature in all its awesome splendour. One of the ideal goals of drum performance is to achieve a state in which the listener arrives at the ultimate point of listening to the "music of heaven".

Commercial Discography

Recent Performances


Works for Percussion by this Composer

Afro-Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra, op.50a - Multiple Percussion Duo; Orchestra
Afro-Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra, op.50b - Multiple Percussion; Orchestra
Alternation I, Op.58 - Marimba; Alto Saxophone
Alternation II, Op.59 - Marimba; Bass Clarinet
Autumn Metamorphose, op.70 - Vibraphone; Piano; Harp
Concertante, op.79 - Marimba; Percussion Sextet
Concerto M-2000 - Marimba; Orchestra
Drifting Island, op.38 - Multiple Percussion
Dyu-Ha for Kodo Drummers, op.46 - Percussion Septet
Elegie für Yokobue und Schlagzeug, op.65 - Percussion Trio
Episode I, op.102 - Multiple Percussion
For Lily, op.81 - Percussion Quartet
Fourteen Percussions - Percussion Duo
Hiten-Seido II, op.55 - Marimba Duet
Hiten-Seido III, op.75 - Marimba
Kaguyahime (Die nachglänzende Prinzessin), op.56b - Percussion Ensemble(16)
Kaguyahime (Die nachglänzende Prinzessin), Symphonic Suite for Percussion Ensemble, op.56 - Percussion Ensemble(16)
Kaleidophone, op.97 - Percussion Trio
Klavierstnck für Pianist und Schlagzeuger, Op.12 - Multiple Percussion; Piano
Ko Kû (The Void), op.74 - Percussion Sextet
Kumano Fudaraku, op.42 - Percussion Duo; Tape; Voice
Kyô-sô, op.14 - Percussion Sextet; Orchestra
Marimbastück mit zwei Schlagzeugern, Op. 16 - Marimba; Percussion Duo
Monochrome, op.28 - Multiple Percussion
Mono-Prism II, op.65 - Multiple Percussion
Mono-Prism, op.29 - Percussion Septet; Orchestra
Omote, op.35 - Multiple Percussion; Tape; Noh
Percussion Concerto - SouthòFireòSummer, op.95 - Multiple Percussion; Orchestra
Saidôki (Demon), op.86 - Multiple Percussion; Orchestra
Search in Gray, op.37 - Multiple Percussion; Tape
Sen-Ten, op.20 - Multiple Percussion; Tape
Thirteen Drums, op.66 - Multiple Percussion

Additional Resources