Yayoi Kitazume

Yayoi Kitazume (北爪 やよひ, Kitazume Yayoi, born 26 March 1945) is a Japanese composer. She is the daughter of the clarinettist and music pedagogue Risei Kitazume (1919–2004), who was president of the Japan Clarinet Society from 1980 to 1986, and the older sister of the composer Michio Kitazume.

Biography

Kitazume graduated from the Tokyo University of the Arts and later studied with composers Yoshiro Ikeuchi and Akio Yashiro.[1]

Her Sonatine for clarinet and piano (1971) received a favorable review in The Clarinet in 1994.[2] Haruna Miyake described Kitazume's work as "quiet, sparse, and spatial" in 1999.[3]

gollark: As I said, you obviously *want* high uptime, but sometimes the tradeoffs aren't worth it.
gollark: "Dedicated server" basically just means it's on a dedicated machine.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: BUT those things would incur a bunch of cost - either financial or time - and I don't need high uptime enough to pay that.
gollark: As an example, osmarks.tk isn't up all the time. This is probably because it runs off my home internet connection and such, and partly because I do server migrations in ways which leave services down a bit. If I actually *needed* more than the current ~99% (okay I'm wildly guessing) uptime, there are many ways I could improve it.

References

  1. "Kitazume Yayoi (Kitazume, Yayoi)". Musica Bella. Retrieved November 11, 2018.
  2. "The Clarinet, Volume 22". Google Books. 1994. Retrieved November 11, 2018.
  3. C. Wade, Bonnie (January 13, 2014). Composing Japanese Musical Modernity. University of Chicago Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780226085494.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.