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 Posted:   Apr 11, 2017 - 12:33 PM   
 By:   sajrocks   (Member)

Anyone who has a hankering for Ifukube's classic themes via theatrical chamber techno-pop ensemble Hikashu plus art pop duo Charan-Po-Rantan (playing the twin fairies from MOTHRA no less), full details below!


Famed Techno-Pop Band Hikashu Breaths Fresh Fire into 'Godzilla', Reinvents the Timeless Monster Music of Legendary Japanese Composer for a New Generation

Godzilla Legend—Music of Akira Ifukube

One Night Only! Friday, April 28, 2017, 7:30 pm, at Japan Society NYC

** Featuring Special Guests Charan-Po-Rantan **


New York, NY – For the first time in the U.S., legendary Japanese composer Akira Ifukube’s massively influential monster music comes to life in the chamber pop/rock aural extravaganza, Godzilla Legend—Music of Akira Ifukube. Presented by Japan's popular techno-pop band Hikashu, this 90-minute tour de force performance features favorite themes and sensational musical set pieces from some of the most revered Godzilla movies of all time. Devised and arranged by Hikashu founding member INOUE Makoto under Ifukube's endorsement, the performance features narration by Inoue, who also plays synthesizers, and appearances by 'extreme vocalist' and multi-instrumentalist MAKIGAMI Koichi, current Hikashu front man, and rising star art-pop duo Charan-Po-Rantan. The one-night-only concert takes place Friday, April 28, 7:30 pm, at Japan Society.

URL: http://www.japansociety.org/event/godzilla-legendmusic-of-akira-ifukube

Playing throughout Japan in various incarnations since 1984 (most notably for 100,000 people at the 2012 Fuji Rock Festival, Japan's largest annual summer outdoor concert), Godzilla Legend—Music of Akira Ifukube opens with a haunting rendition of the sea shanty sung by ill-fated sailors in the opening of the original 1954 Godzilla film. This dives into the immediately recognizable "Main Title," a pounding, perpetual mixed-meter march, incessantly loping and lurching forward like the monster itself. What follows is an adventurous compilation of some of the most memorable music adapted from such classic films as RODAN! (1956), MOTHRA (1961), King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962), Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster (1964), Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II (1993), and Godzilla vs. Destoroyah (1995) and many more. Styles encompass rousing military marches, stirring dirges echoing human heartache of destruction (and sometimes the sentimentality of the monsters), pastiches of Japanese folk music, a range of atonal experiments and the signature sci-fi quavers of synthesizers, theremin and more.

A highlight is the aural appearance of the only beast to best Godzilla: Mothra, including the hymn-like theme for the creature and the infectious "Mothra’s Song", taking flight through the hypotonic harmonies of Charan-Po-Rantan, standing in for the twin fairies made famous by the 60s pop duo The Peanuts (note: the latter song is the only music on the bill not composed by Ifukube.)

The concert is brought to life through a blend of rock, pop, jazz, and electronica as well as spectacular improvised interludes—experimental soundscapes that capture the exotic locations of the films or the doom dripping darkness from which the monsters rise. While a night of fun and celebration, Inoue also pays homage to serious themes of the films: that these cinematic horrors were inspired by the prevalence of natural disasters in Japan, as well as man-made catastrophes such as the devastating fires that resulted from the Tokyo air raids during WWII and the cataclysmic atomic bombings. He notes that these themes still echo today with the ongoing Fukushima nuclear crisis following the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011.

In addition to Inoue (synthesizer, narration), Makigami (vocals, Theremin, gong), and Charan-Po-Rantan (vocals, accordion), musicians include Hikashu members MITA Freeman (guitar), SAKAIDE Masami (bass), SHIMIZU Kazuto (synthesizer), and SATO Masaharu (drums), and seasoned guest musicians Tatsumi Kogoro (trumpet), YOSHIDA Ryuichi (baritone sax), and GOTO Atsushi (trombone). [NOTE: Most members of the band prefer that their names appear in standard Japanese order, surname followed by given name; in these instances, surnames appear in all caps.]

Since Godzilla first stepped out of the sea in 1954, it has been a global cinematic phenomenon. While many credit the film's producer, director and special effects designer for the genesis of Japan's most recognized movie monster, there was a seminal fourth figure instrumental to the creature’s conception and lasting resonance in the hearts and imaginations of audiences around the world: composer Akira Ifukube (1914–2006). A profoundly prolific, classically trained composer with dozens of concert works and nearly 300 film scores to his credit, Ifukube not only provided Godzilla’s indelible musical accompaniment for the first film and many of its most popular sequels, he literally gave voice to Godzilla, creating the creature’s signature roar by stroking a tuned-down double base with resin-covered gloves and ominous footsteps by kettledrum struck with a knotted rope.

Born in Japan's northern island of Hokkaido in 1914, Ifukube became interested in music at a young age, with early influences ranging from traditional Japanese music and the folk music of Japan’s indigenous Ainu people of the Hokkaido region, to Western 20th century composers such as Igor Stravinsky and Manuel de Falla. Before his teens, Ifukube started practicing violin and guitar, and was writing music at age 13. Though he studied forestry at Hokkaido University (his thesis was on the acoustics of wood), he established himself as a concert music composer after graduating, winning the international Tcherepnin Award at the age of 21 for his Japanese Symphony.

After WWII Ifukube was invited to Tokyo to produce music for Toho Studios. His first film score in 1948 was for Senkichi Taniguchi's To the End of the Silver Mountains, and he would go on to score several of the studio's dramas and adventure films by leading and then-emerging directors, such as Akira Kurosawa, Kon Ichikawa, Hideo Sekigawa, Hiroshi Inagaki, Daisuke Ito, and Kenji Misumi. In 1954 he accepted assignment for Godzilla, composing much of the score before the film was complete and helping to launch Toho's giant-monster movie global franchise. In 1978 following his score to Lady Ogin (Love and Faith in the U.S.), Ifukube stopped contributing music to films to focus on teaching duties and composition. In 1983 he created the concert work Symphonic Fantasia (a.k.a. Godzilla Fantasia) based on existing movie themes, and in 1986 was commissioned by Toho to write Ostinato, a collection of newly updated themes produced by INOUE Makoto. In 1991 he came out of ostensible retirement from film music to score Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah, a lavish remake of Toho's first monster-versus-monster film 1964's Ghidrah, the Three Headed Monster, and scored the remakes Godzilla vs. Mothra (1992), Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II (1993) and Godzilla vs. Destoroyah (1995), after which he retired. Ifukube died on February 8, 2006. [Sources: Inoue, Randall D. Larson's "Voice of Gojira" and akiraifukube.org.]

Godzilla Legend—Music of Akira Ifukube takes place Friday, April 28, at 7:30 pm. Cash bar opens at 6:00 pm. Japan Society is located at 333 East 47th Street between First and Second avenues (accessible by the 4/5/6 and 7 subway at Grand Central or the E and M subway at Lexington Avenue). Tickets are $32/$28 Japan Society members, seniors and students, and may be purchased in person at Japan Society, by visiting www.japansociety.org, or by calling the box office at 212-715-1258. For more information, call 212-832-1155 or visit the website.

# # #

 
 Posted:   Apr 14, 2017 - 8:30 AM   
 By:   sajrocks   (Member)

Spotify has a surprising amount of Ifukube (surprising that there's any), almost all of which is his monster music. I put together a playlist of about 75 minutes of highlights. Curious to know what people think. Warning to the purists: a few tracks contain sound effects, but to be fair Ifukube did create Godzilla's original roar and footsteps. big grin

PLAYLIST: The Voice of Godzilla: Music of Akira Ifukube
https://open.spotify.com/user/124591654/playlist/1G9CrXFLoLjlqJ7wbP5QzR

Sacred Festival of Ohdo Island - Godzilla
Godzilla Appears† - Godzilla
Main Title - Godzilla
An Attack of Monsters: Main Title - Destroy All Monsters
Fear of Godzilla† - King Kong vs. Godzilla
Mothra and the Twin Faeries – Mothra vs. Godzilla
Mothra’s Journey†† - Mothra vs. Godzilla
Main Theme - King Kong vs. Godzilla
Main Title† - Rodan!
The First Victim - Rodan!
Supersonic Pursuit - Rodan!
Radon Flies to Sasabo - Rodan!
The Natural Beatuy of Aso - Rodan!
Ending - Rodan!
Monster Land - Destroy All Monsters
Kilaak’s Entity - Destroy All Monsters
Ending - Destroy All Monsters
A Premonition for Invaders - Terror of Mechagodzilla
Spaceship from Planet X Appears - Godzilla vs. Monster Zero
Birth of King Ghidorah - Ghidrah the Three Headed Monster
Seahawk S.O.S.†† - King Kong vs. Godzilla
Plan of Operation to Transport King Kong - King Kong vs. Godzilla
Big War of Monsters March† - Godzilla vs. Monster Zero
Battle Between King Kong and Godzilla†† - King Kong vs. Godzilla
Mechagodzilla’s Revenge - Terror of Mechagodzilla
Ending† - Godzilla vs. Mothra
Symphonic Fantasia No. 1 [a.k.a. Godzilla Fantasia] (excerpt) - Dmitry Yablonsky, Russian Philharmonic Orchestra

† Contains sound effects created by Akira Ifukube
†† Contains sound effects.

 
 Posted:   Apr 16, 2017 - 9:50 AM   
 By:   sajrocks   (Member)

Related:



Composed by Yuji Koseki.

 
 Posted:   Apr 16, 2017 - 12:13 PM   
 By:   Timothy J. Phlaps   (Member)

I'd be all over this is I were in New York. Or the US in general.

 
 Posted:   Apr 16, 2017 - 12:48 PM   
 By:   Sean Nethery   (Member)

Sajrocks, your efforts are not in vain, listening to your Spotify playlist now. Anything available from Hikashu's performances anywhere? Not gonna be in NYC.

 
 Posted:   Apr 21, 2017 - 1:40 PM   
 By:   sajrocks   (Member)

Sajrocks, your efforts are not in vain, listening to your Spotify playlist now. Anything available from Hikashu's performances anywhere? Not gonna be in NYC.

Thanks Sean! Hope you liked the playlist. The only thing of Hikashu's performance that I could find is from the encore, which is maybe not the best representation of the concert. I've watched a dvd of it a couple of times and the Mothra section is particularly fantastic. The show actually sold out, but I'm still trying to find people to review it. If only there was a outlet around dedicated to film music. wink

 
 Posted:   Apr 25, 2017 - 11:28 AM   
 By:   Sean Nethery   (Member)

OH, yes, enjoyed your playlist. I have most of this music, but it's fun to see it on Spotify and hear someone else's playlist. Fun!

 
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