There is an old photograph 
                where a boyish Oliver Knussen towers 
                head and shoulders over Toru Takemitsu. 
                It captures the rapport between them. 
                This is only the third release on the 
                Sinfonietta’s own label, but it’s fitting 
                that it should feature Takemitsu. Ozawa 
                and Boulez may have premiered the works 
                on this recording, but the relationship 
                between the composer, Knussen and the 
                Sinfonietta was special. This recording 
                contains excerpts from an important 
                Takemitsu retrospective, sponsored by 
                the Sinfonietta in 1998. I don’t know 
                why they didn’t include the rest of 
                the programme, but just having it is 
                worthwhile. By sheer coincidence, the 
                release date would have been Takemitsu’s 
                76th birthday. 
              
 
              
Takemitsu said that 
                Green was written "from 
                a wish to enter into the secrets of 
                Debussy’s music". Swathes of string 
                sound revolve, changing coloration as 
                starker, more dominant brass and woodwinds 
                enter. Then, in the last few moments 
                there’s a breakthrough into more vernal 
                openness, the emerging stillness accentuated 
                with the sound of a muted bell. 
              
 
              
The atmosphere in Arc 
                is even more intense. It was written 
                specifically around the idea of a garden, 
                which in Japanese culture is a metaphor 
                for nature itself. Japanese gardens 
                evoke in miniature much wider elements 
                of landscape. At their most abstract, 
                they may seem no more than rocks and 
                sand. Monks who sweep the lines in the 
                sand of these gardens do so as a spiritual 
                exercise: they are recreating symbolic 
                waves, oceans, and limitless horizons 
                for the soul. Businessmen sometimes 
                have a tray garden, to escape without 
                leaving the office. 
              
 
              
Not all Japanese gardens 
                are quite so ascetic, though. The vast 
                majority are filled with living plants, 
                rocks, water. This is the type of garden 
                I imagine Takemitsu was most at home 
                in, full of colour, light and movement. 
                At some periods of western garden history, 
                gardens were formally structured to 
                keep nature at bay. A Japanese garden 
                is quite the opposite. It exists to 
                bring the freedom of nature back into 
                human life. Hence the rocks and water, 
                bridges and hidden vistas that only 
                reveal themselves when you are in the 
                garden, involving yourself in its life. 
                Even fallen leaves are part of the concept: 
                the sight of maple leaves floating down 
                a stream has inspired many a poet. Nothing 
                could be further from this approach 
                to nature than the serried rows of bug-free 
                rosebushes in a western winter. 
              
 
              
There is a film in 
                which Takemitsu is shown sitting in 
                a garden, explaining how it is a metaphor 
                for music. A garden is like an orchestra, 
                he says, consisting of lots of different 
                elements which a musician can arrange 
                in whatever order seems best. You can 
                increase the impact of some elements 
                by massing them, or extend their colours 
                by planting with others that complement 
                the palette. Sometimes some elements 
                capture the eye, such as autumn leaves, 
                while others remain a backbone, like 
                pines. Textures vary: sometimes the 
                delicacy of spring blossom, sometimes 
                the tough character of tree bark. Then, 
                too, there are extras, maybe the sound 
                of water trickling from a bamboo pipe, 
                or the chirping of crickets, or wind 
                blowing through leaves. Or even the 
                pattern of shade thrown by a cloud in 
                the sky. A gardener works with nature, 
                not against it. Thus a composer works 
                with an orchestra, extending it and 
                encouraging it to grow, but finding 
                his ideas organically and in balance. 
              
 
              
Thus with Arc, 
                Takemitsu’s first explicitly "garden" 
                work, we enter on a six part journey 
                of exploration. Its foundation is a 
                hum on strings that drones like a flatline. 
                It is a low, steady murmur, from which 
                sudden sparks of sound shoot out, gradually 
                getting denser and more animated. The 
                piano enters, at first tentatively, 
                then joyously skittish as sounds around 
                it grow. Horns, clarinet, woodblocks, 
                trombone and other instruments can clearly 
                heard in short, impressionistic flashes. 
                The steady murmuring strings return, 
                but this time their individual voices 
                are more defined. Sharp, sudden dissonances 
                break the pace, and a clarinet soars 
                up the scale. In the third movement, 
                cellos and basses pick up the murmur 
                and gradually it turns into a wild dance, 
                tantalising sounds coming from all sides 
                in quick succession. This movement wasn’t 
                scored conventionally, and there’s no 
                mistaking its vitality. The lower notes 
                of the piano resonate with depth and 
                darkness. Then with a swooping crescendo, 
                the music transforms again. With scuttling, 
                scraping figures the music subsides 
                again. The piano’s sonorities now become 
                dry, toneless taps, and even the rumbling 
                murmur fades. The piano gets a bit of 
                time on its own, so to speak, but the 
                orchestra returns full force, led by 
                a fast-paced brass fanfare. In the coda, 
                the susurration of the strings, asserts 
                the primacy of their theme. 
              
Anne Ozorio  
              
[To be released on 
                8th October - the birthday of both Takemitsu 
                and Anne Ozorio!]