Sômei Satoh is often classified as an ambient composer because of his penchant for writing slow, meditative works that evoke the mystical ...
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Sômei Satoh is often classified as an ambient composer because of his penchant for writing slow, meditative works that evoke the mystical timelessness of Asian sacred music. However, Satoh's tonal harmonies and unblurred orchestration follow western conventions, and his soft, static works are only superficially like ambient music, insofar as very little happens. The drawn-out chord progressions in Kisetsu resemble the uninteresting bits of late Romantic slow movements, patched together and stretched into an empty, featureless adagio. Whatever ambience one perceives is incidental, due merely to low audibility. In the same vein, Kyokoku is an elegiac work centered on baritone Katsunori Kono's slow, sonorous chant, but the brooding orchestral accompaniment consists of little more than predictable minor key progressions, ornamented with a few exotic bell sounds. The Violin Concerto opens with more activity and promises to bring some relief from the tedium of the previous pieces. Anne Akiko Meyers plays a...
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