|
Kitaro (喜多郎 Kitarō) (born as Masanori Takahashi (高橋正則 Takahashi Masanori) on February 4, 1953 in Toyohashi, Aichi Prefecture, Japan) is a composer and multi-instrumentalist. His pseudonym "Kitaro" was given later by friends because of a Japanese television cartoon character named Kitaro, from Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro. He is the son of shintoistic farmers. Image File history File links This work is copyrighted. ...
Image File history File links This work is copyrighted. ...
February 4 is the 35th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ...
1953 (MCMLIII) was a common year starting on Thursday. ...
Toyohashi (è±æ©å¸; -shi) is a city located in Aichi, Japan. ...
Aichi Prefecture ) is located in the Chūbu region of Japan. ...
A composer is a person who writes music. ...
A multi-instrumentalist is a musician who plays a number of different instruments. ...
Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro is a horror anime. ...
Biography
Early life Inspired by the R&B music of Otis Redding, Kitaro taught himself how to play guitar. He says of teaching himself, "I never had education in music, I just learned to trust my ears and my feelings." He gives credit for his creations to a power beyond himself. "This music is not from my mind," he said. "It is from heaven, going through my body and out my fingers through composing. Sometimes I wonder. I never practice. I don't read or write music, but my fingers move. I wonder 'Whose song is this?' I write my songs, but they are not my songs."[citation needed] Otis Ray Redding, Jr. ...
While attending Toyohashi Commercial High School, he organized the "Albatross" band with his friends. At that time, they performed in parties and clubs. "In high school, I was in an amateur band. I started out playing the guitar but then changed to the keyboards. Before one of our gigs, the drummer was injured. I had no experience at all on the drums, but I had to learn it because I was the leader of the band, and we had to do the gig. My drumming was not very good, but we got through the show in one piece. Later, the bassist had injuries, so I had to learn how to play the bass. [These accidents are] the main reasons why I can play all these instruments; I had a crash course in how to play them. It was a hard time for me, but a very good experience. It created the base knowledge of all the instruments I use and need to create my current brand of music. After graduating, I really wanted to be in the music business, so I moved to Tokyo and started looking for bands to play with. I basically did it for the experience and to get a feel of all the clubs that were available in Tokyo and Yokohama. At that time I played keyboards, and then I discovered the synthesizer. This was a revelation. First of all, the instructions for the thing were in English so I couldn't read them. I was trying to make sounds but couldn't! I tried for a whole day, but no sound ever came out because I didn't know how to program it or set it up. Finally, the first sound I got off this thing was a wind-like sound, but I was so elated that I actually made some noise, it didn't matter. I turned one of the knobs slowly to make more wind-like noises. Then I decided to buy another synthesizer to form a different type of sound. I just loved the analog sound that it made compared to today's digital sound. Now, my equipment and synthesizers are all analog. But technically, digital is much easier to use for editing and other stuff."[citation needed] His parents were first opposed to the idea of their son having a musical career. They had other plans for him and in an attempt to get him to see their way, made arrangements for him to take a job at a local company. However he left home without telling them before. He supported himself by taking on several part time jobs such as cooking and civil service work while composing songs at night. In the early '70s he changed completely to keyboards. He joined the band "Far East Family Band" and toured with them around the world. In Europe he met the German synthesizer musician and former Tangerine Dream member Klaus Schulze. Schulze produced two albums for the band and gave Kitaro some tips for the use of synthesizers. Tangerine Dream is a German electronic music group founded in 1967 by Edgar Froese. ...
Klaus Schulze is a German electronic music composer and musician. ...
In 1976 he left the band and travelled through Asia (China, Laos, Thailand, India).
Solo career Back in Japan Kitaro started his solo career in 1977. The first two albums Ten Kai and From the Full Moon Story became cult favorites of fans of the nascent New Age movement. He performed his first symphonic concert at the 'Small Hall' of the Kosei Nemkin Kaikan in Shinjuku, Toyko. During this concert Kitaro used a synthesizer to recreate the sounds of 40 different instruments, a world's first. But it was his famous soundtrack for the NHK series "Silk Road" which brought him the international attention. New Age describes a broad movement characterized by alternative approaches to traditional Western culture. ...
He struck a worldwide distribution arrangement with Geffen Records in 1986; in 1987 he collaborated with different musicians, e.g. with Micky Hart (Grateful Dead) and Jon Anderson (Yes) and his record sales soared to 10 million worldwide. He was then nominated twice for a Grammy and his soundtrack (for the movie "Heaven & Earth") won a 1994 award for best original score. His biggest musical success was the Grammy Award 2001 for his album Thinking of You. The Grateful Dead were an American psychedelia-influenced rock band formed in 1965 in San Francisco. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Grammy Award statuette The Grammy Awards, presented by the Recording Academy (an association of Americans professionally involved in the recorded music industry) for outstanding achievements in the recording industry, is one of four major music awards shows held annually in the United States (the Billboard Music Awards, the American Music...
Heaven & Earth is a 1993 film directed by Oliver Stone and starring Haing S. Ngor and Hiep Thi Le. ...
Personal life Kitaro is very modest. "Nature inspires me. I am only a messenger", he said. "To me, some songs are like clouds, some are like water".[citation needed] Since 1983 his reverence for nature leads Kitaro to annually give thanks to Mother Nature in a special "concert" on Mount Fuji or near his house in Colorado. On the day of the full moon of August he beats on the Taiko drum from dusk to dawn. Frequently his hands become bloodied, but he continues to pound. Taiko drummers in Aichi, Japan The word taiko (太é¼) means simply drum in Japanese (etymologically great or wide drum). Outside Japan, the word is often used to refer to any of the various Japanese drums (å太é¼, wa-daiko, Japanese drum, in Japanese) and to the relatively recent art-form of ensemble taiko...
From 1983 till 1990 he was married with his first wife Yuki Taoka. Yuki is a daughter of Kazuo Taoka, godfather of Yamaguchi-gumi, the largest Yakuza syndicate. Kitaro and Yuki have a son, Ryunosuke, who lives in Japan. They separated because Kitaro worked most time in the United States while she lived and worked in Japan. In the middle of the 1990s Kitaro married Keiko Matsubara, a musician who played on several of his albums. With her and her son Kitaro lived in Ward, Colorado on a 180 acre (730,000 m²) spread and composed in his 2500 square foot (230 m²) home studio "Mochi House" (it is large enough to hold a 70 piece orchestra). Kitaro and Keiko recently relocated to Occidental, California. Kazuo Taoka (ç°å²¡ä¸é, Taoka Kazuo) is the most prominent of the yakuza kumicho (godfathers), known as the Godfather of Godfathers. ...
The Sixth Yamaguchi-gumi (Japanese: å
代ç®å±±å£çµ Rokudaime Yamaguchi-gumi) is Japans largest and most famous yakuza organization. ...
This article is about the organized crime group. ...
This article is 150 kilobytes or more in size. ...
Historic buildings in Ward, Colorado Ward (elevation 9,450 ft / 2880 m) is a town located in Boulder County, Colorado. ...
Other works He has also worked with Virtuoso Guitarist Marty Friedman, formerly of Megadeth, on the "Scenes" album, which had a significal impact on the forthcoming Kitaro's "Mandala" release. Martin Adam Marty Friedman (born December 8, 1962) is an American guitarist. ...
Megadeth is an American heavy metal band led by founder, frontman, and songwriter Dave Mustaine. ...
Also, Kitaro composed the soundtrack of the Oliver Stone film Heaven and Earth.
Discography Discography: 1978 - Ten Kai/Astral Voyage/Astral Voyager/Astral Trip 1979 - Full Moon Story/Daichi 1979 - Oasis 1980 - Silk Road (a.k.a. The Soghdian Merchants on VHS) 1980 - Silk Road II 1980 - In Person Digital 1980 - Silk Road Suite 1981 - Silk Road III: Tunhuang 1981 - Best of Kitaro vol 1 1981 - World of Kitaro 1981 - Ki 1982 - Millennia/Queen Millennia 1983 - Silk Road IV: Tenjiku/India 1984 - Silver Cloud/Cloud 1984 - Live in Asia/Asia Super Tour Live/Asia 1986 - Toward the West 1986 - Tenku 1987 - Light of the Spirit 1988 - Ten Years/Best of Ten Years 1990 - Kojiki 1991 - Live in America 1992 - Dream/Lady of Dreams 1993 - Heaven and Earth 1994 - Mandala 1995 - An Enchanted Evening - Live 1996 - Peace On Earth 1997 - Cirque Ingenieux 1998 - Gaia-Onbashira 1999 - Best of Kitaro vol 2 1999 - Thinking of You 2000 - The Soong Sisters 2001 - Ancient 2002 - An Ancient Journey 2002 - Daylight, Moonlight in Yakushiji - Live 2003 - Best of Silk Road 2003 - Sacred Journey of Ku-Kai 2004 - Shikoku 88 Places 2005 - Sacred Journey of Ku-Kai Volume 2 2006 - Spiritual Garden
Other Albums (No Release Year) Astral Voyage/Ten-Kai Asian Cafe/Ashu Chakan All Roads Lead To Rome Across The Karakum Desert Across The Pamir Dansu Deep Forest Endless Journey Freedom Chants Healing Forest Ninja Scroll (Soundtrack) In Silent In Search Of Wisdom Journey To The Heart I Journey To The Heart II Journey To The Heart III Journey To The Heart IV Kaiso (Kitaro's World Of Music) Karuna (Kitaro's World Of Music) Mu Land Mizu Ni Inorte Morning Light Music For The Spirit Vol. 1 Music For The Spirit Vol. 2 Music For The Spirit Vol. 3 Music For The Spirit Vol. 4 Nile Six Musical Portraits Tamayura Tento Chi Tokusen 1 Tokusen 2 Tonko Tunhuang Vertigo Yakushi-Ji
Kitaro with Others Far East Family Band - Far Out (1973) Far East Family Band - The Cave Down To Earth (1974) Far East Family Band - Nipponjin (1975) Far East Family Band - Parallel World (1976) Far East Family Band - Tenkujin (1977) Gyoto Monks - Gyoto Monks Gyoto Monks - From The Roof Of The World
In addition the various record companies who have distributed Kitaro's music have released several compilation albums over the years. Quite a few of them are listed here -> [1]
External links - Kitaro Music - Official site
- Domo Records - Kitaro's Record Company
- Kitaro House - Fan page with discography
- Kitaro Album Collection (World of Instrumental Music)
|