Takehisa Kosugi

출생 : 1938-03-24, Tokyo, Japan

사망 : 2018-10-12

약력

Takehisa Kosugi was a Japanese composer. In 1969, Kosugi formed the Taj Mahal Travellers.

참여 작품

MA: Space/Time in the Garden of Ryoan-ji
Music
The early sixteenth-century Japanese garden in the Zen temple of Ryoan-ji, in Kyoto, is considered a masterpiece of the karesansui or "dry landscape" style... In this film, the viewer is invited to experience the garden as an embodiment of ma, a Japanese concept that conveys both time and space... The aesthetic of the film is the message, it has the quality of an experimental film, a conceptual film-an artwork in itself. Good balance of music/visuals/titles. If not as compelling for some viewers as for others, still rated as very effective. Makes one want to visit the actual garden and experience its spiritual energy. – Art on Screen
아스파라거스에 관한 에로틱 판타지
Musician
신비한 온실에서 거대한 아스파라거스를 키우고 있는 주인공 여성이 섹스샵이 즐비한 거리를 지나 도착한 극장에서 자신의 환상적인 소지품들을 무대 위로 펼쳐낸다. 집에 돌아온 그녀는 이제 자신만의 은밀한 성적 환상에 빠진다.
Cinema Metaphysique No. 1-5
Sound
This early work belongs in the company of Paik and Yalkut's classic collaborative "video-films," including Video Tape Study No. 3, Beatles Electronique, and Missa of Zen. To the accompaniment of the abrupt sonic interjections of Fluxus-affiliated composer Takehisa Kosugi, Yalkut's black and white film records brief, masked actions: an arm with clenching fist; a pair of faces, visible only about the eyes, which squint, gaze, and rest; Paik eating a slice of bread. Reminiscent of Beckett's theater, as well as the minimal movements of 1960s avant-garde dance, Cinéma Metaphysique is a study in gesture and stillness, noise and silence.
On Tour
Fluxus artist and composer Takehisa Kosugi assembled a crew of young musicians and hit the road in a VW bus from Rotterdam to the Taj Mahal, playing a series of shows along the way in which the band used traditional instruments run through a series of electronic effects to create long sheets of drone both pulsing and timeless. Filmed by Takehisa Kosugi's mentor Matsu Ohno (perhaps best known in the States for his sound effects/score work on the television series Astro-Boy), the film moves at the same pace as the music itself, a pastoral road movie following a band far more likely to play temples than clubs.