
With Sun/Moon, Somei Satoh speaks with the ancient, distinct voice of 
Buddha, with enough melodramatic romanticism to stir the emotions of 
even the most Western ears. Perhaps less cinematic than his previous 
album, Toward the Night, but no less passionate in tone, with gorgeous, 
rich dialogue between shakuhachi and koto that circulates between 
whispers, cries, gasps, and deep contemplation. The opening piece, 
"Kougetsu," is the sound of a rock garden minding its own business, a 
dragonfly dreaming restlessly amongst the bamboo. "Sanyou" follows in 
much the same way, in an expression of (as the composer puts it) "the 
purity of the early morning air." Shin Miyashita plucks his 17-string 
koto with patience, reverence, and in perfect symbiosis with Akikazu 
Nakamura, a stoic virtuoso on the shakuhachi. Nakamura was the first to 
use circular breathing with the instrument, and to great effect on the 
dynamic closing solo of "Kaze No Kyoku," where he both prowls within 
barely audible harmonics and at once opens the floodgates to the 
distressful chills of night. It is often Satoh's generous use of silence
 that gives this album such meditative weight -- a sense of patiently 
unfolding enlightenment. Consequently, song structure seems less 
prominent than the rich, extended phrasings that rise, fall, and rise 
again over the course of 44 minutes. The album closes as it began, as 
Nakamura once again breathes a pure, almost glass-like vapor of tone 
into the silence around it. Sun/Moon is a small treasure from New Albion
 Records worth finding. Keir Langley
Tracklist :
1    Kougetsu (Moon)    15:16
2    Sanyo (Sun)    18:11
3    Kaze No Kyoku (Wind)    10:25
Akikazu Nakamura : Shakuhachi
Shin Miyashita : Koto   
 
 
 
 
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