Keiko Fujiie

Keiko Fujiie, born in 1963 in Kyoto, is an award-winning composer whose music is frequently performed both in Japan and internationally. After graduating at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, she completed her postgraduate studies at the same institution. She is among the very few Japanese composers to have twice won the coveted Otaka Prize awarded by the NHK Symphony Orchestra for the previous year's outstanding composition; in 1995 for Beber for orchestra and in 2000 for Guitar Concerto No.2 "Koisucho". She has composed a number of pieces for guitar, many of them for the distinguished Japanese guitarist (also her husband) Kazuhito Yamashita.

Fujiie was presented with the Kenzo Nakajima Award in 1996 for her monologue opera Nina de Cera. Support from the Asian Cultural Council resulted in a residency in New York for several months in 1992-93, where she returned in 1998 to premiere In Their Shoes, a music and dance collaboration. From 1998-1999 she served as composer-in-residence for Orchestra Ensemble Kanazawa. Her commissions include Academic Festival Overture for the hundredth anniversary of Kyoto University, the double concerto Kyoto: Reverberation for the Kyoto Protocol Treaty in 1997 and Piano Concerto No.1“Memories of January” composed for the seventieth anniversary of the Japan Music Competition in 2001. Fujiie was asked to write the compulsory piece for participants in the Fifth Musashino-Tokyo International Organ Competition of 2004 and At the Tomb of Fra Angelico for Organ and Orchestra (also a commission) was composed to be performed by the winner of this same competition in 2006. Her Guitar Concerto No.3 “Autumn Reverie” was premiered in Seoul, 2011.

Since 2004, a major focus for Fujiie has been organizing the guitar quintet "Kazuhito Yamashita Family Quintet", for whom she also composes. "Kasane" is their main repertoire and typifies the music of a bygone era. This quintet looks to the risorgimento of the quintessential and older musical traditions of both Europe and Japan when such music was known and valued, and whose echoes can still be heard in the classic Japanese 11th century novel "The Tale of Genji." In this piece, four guitars, multi-layering with shifting tonal colors, represent the various plucked stringed instruments of old Japan. Recent repertoire especially written for the quintet includes “A Cantastoria of One Thousand and One Nights” for five guitars, "Suicho-Tsushimanoraku" for three guitars, vocals and stones, and "Morokoshi ni tsukawasu tsukai no fune Naniwa yori izuru toki haha ga ko ni okureru uta" for vocal, 5 guitars and Japanese Bugaku dance. This last piece accords to the poetry sung by the mother of one of the members of a ship used on a Japanese mission to Tang dynasty China which departed in the year 733 AD. She composed this poetry on seeing her son off at Naniwa port, calling to a skein of cranes in the sky to ask to warm the traveler whenever there was a layer of frost on the field.

Fujiie has made 3 CDs with the "Kazuhito Yamashita Family Quintet" and has been invited along with them to many music festivals such as the Rome International Guitar Festival in 2004, the Cordoba Guitar Festival in 2007 and 2011, the Open Guitar Festival 2011 in the Czech Republic and so on. Keiko also composes for orchestra and choir and has also written chamber music and opera. One area of interest is the ancient court music in Japan, "Gagaku" which she researches, also composing for this instrumental ensemble. [1][2][3]

Works

Fujiie is best known for guitar compositions, many of them for Japanese guitarist Kazuhito Yamashita. Selected works include:

Her works have been recorded and issued on CD, including:

References

  1. "Keiko Fujiie and the Otaka Award". U.S.-Japan women's journal: Nichi-Bei josei jānaru, Issues 22-23 U.S.-Japan Women's Center. 2002.
  2. Grove, Sir George; Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (2001). The new Grove dictionary of music and musicians: Volume 9.
  3. "Keiko Fujiie homepage".

External links