Kazuhiro Morita

Kazuhiro Morita (森田一浩 or Morita Kazuhiro, born 1952 in Tokyo) is a Japanese composer and arranger.

Morita studied with Yoshio Hasegawa at the Tokyo University of the Arts.[1] He is known as an arranger, reworking pieces like Appalachian Spring by Aaron Copland, Galánta Dances by Zoltán Kodály, Don Juan and an excerpt from Salome by Richard Strauss, The Miraculous Mandarin by Béla Bartók, Symphony No. 1 by Gustav Mahler, the second suite from the ballet Daphnis et Chloé by Maurice Ravel and the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini by Sergei Rachmaninoff. He is also noted for his arrangements of anime scores (including Castle in the Sky, Princess Mononoke, and Kiki's Delivery Service[2]) and his original compositions. He teaches at Shobi University.

Works

Band[3]
  • Pop Step March
  • Serenade
  • Flower Clock
  • Fanfare I
  • Mana in October
  • Canticle of the South
Chamber works
  • Aubade for clarinet ensemble
  • Bagatelles on the name of Bach for clarinet ensemble
  • Kumamoto Folk Tunes for clarinet ensemble
  • Pele for clarinet quartet
  • Rumba sequence for clarinet quartet
  • Elegia, Ritmica and Sambo-Ostinato for clarinet ensemble
  • Terpsichore I for brass octet
gollark: I think many worlds holds that that's happening constantly anyway, but use of the drive does it more.
gollark: I'm not sure exactly what I was thinking of at the time, but assuming you accept the alternate branches as "existing" in some way then creating new ones is ethically fraught, since you're basically duplicating all morally relevant entities ever.
gollark: A better version would destroy the original universe, to fix some of the ethical issues.
gollark: I guess there's a universe in which the drives have always worked perfectly, one where it's always just unexisted the users, and a bunch of intermediate ones.
gollark: Would people not stop buying them when everyone who uses them ceases to exist?

References

  1. "Kazuhiro Morita" (in Japanese). Brain Music. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  2. "The Princess Mononoke" (in Japanese). Hsin Chu Wind Orchestra. Archived from the original on 23 December 2012. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  3. "Kazuhiro Morita" (in Japanese). Musica Bella. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
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