Name of performance: New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra Chamber Music Series XV # 123 produced by Kazuhiko Sato
Venue: Sumida Triphony Hall Small Hall
Open: 2018/12/08 (Sat) 10:00
Notes:
※ For performers, be sure to apply after checking the official site.
※ 19:00 ... There is pre-talk by performer.
※ Preschoolers can not enter
Limited number of tickets: You can book up to 8 tickets with an application. Application number limit 4 times
Type of seats and fees:
All seats specified: ¥ 3,000
Payment methods:
Credit card: It will be settled when the application is completed.
Convenience store / ATM: Please pay by at that time of display of application.
Family mart
Seven-Eleven
Lawson Ministop
Page compatible ATM
Internet Banking: Please pay by at that deadline of display of application.
Delivery 【Delivery service】: We will deliver in about a week after payment is completed.
FamilyMart: Please receive at the in-store Fami port terminal after 2018/12/08 (Saturday).
Seven-Eleven: Please receive at the cash register after 2018/12/08 (Sat).
The New Japan Philharmonic (新日本フィルハーモニー交響楽団 , Shin Nihon Firuhāmonī Kōkyōgakudan) is a symphony orchestra based in Tokyo, Japan. It was founded in 1972 with Seiji Ozawa as honorary conductor laureate. The Philharmonic's primary concert venue is the Sumida Triphony Hall. From 2003 to 2013 its music director was Christian Arming. Toshiyuki Kamioka has been the music director since 2016.
The orchestra is also known for their film soundtrack productions, notably Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle, both soundtracks composed, arranged, conducted and performed by Joe Hisaishi; and a number of works for Neon Genesis Evangelion, composed, arranged and conducted by Shirō Sagisu. The orchestra also performed the film score for an English-language animated film, The Brave Little Toaster, composed by David Newman. The orchestra has also done live performances with various musicians, notably Yngwie Malmsteen and his Concerto Suite in Eb Minor.
Sumida Triphony Hall (すみだトリフォニーホール Sumida Torifonī Hōlu) is a concert hall in Sumida, Tokyo, Japan. It opened in 1997 and has two auditoria; the main hall, with 1,801 seats; and the small hall, with 252 seats.[1] It is the home of the New Japan Philharmonic.[2] Nikken Sekkei were the architects, with acoustical design by Nagata Acoustics, who tested their concept with a 1:10 model.
The 601st Topaz <Triphony Series>
New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra New Japan Philharmonic
Dates: 2019/3/23 Sat Sat 23 Mar
Opening time:14:00
Venue: Sumida Triphony Hall Sumida Ward Tokyo 2-3-2
Conductor: Toshiyuki Kamioka
Pf. Claire-Mari-le-Gu
Playing song
Mozart Mozart / Symphony No. 31 in D major "Paris" K. 297
Ravel / Piano Concerto in G major
Magnard / Symphony No. 4 in A major Op. 21
Dragon Quest, published as Dragon Warrior in North America until 2005, is a series of Japanese role-playing video games created by Yuji Horii and his studio Armor Project. The games are published by Square Enix (formerly Enix), with localized versions of later installments for the Nintendo DS and 3DS being published by Nintendo outside of Japan. With its first title published in 1986, there are eleven main-series titles, along with numerous spin-off games. In addition, there have been numerous mangas, animes, and novels published under the franchise, with nearly every game in the main series having a related adaptation.
The series has had a significant impact on the development of console role-playing games and introduced a number of features to the genre. Installments of the series have appeared on various computers, consoles, handheld devices, and mobile phones. Early in the series the Dragon Quest games were released under the title Dragon Warrior in North America to avoid a trademark conflict with the unrelated tabletop role-playing game DragonQuest. Square Enix did not register the Dragon Quest trademark for use in the United States until 2002.
The basic premise of most Dragon Quest titles is to play a hero who is out to save the land from peril at the hands of a powerful evil enemy, with the hero usually accompanied by a group of party members. Common elements persist throughout the series and its spinoff titles: turn-based combat; recurring monsters, including the Slime, which became the series' mascot until the English version of Dragon Quest VIII; a text-based menu system; and random encounters (in the main series), until Dragon Quest IX.
Dragon Quest has had the same general lead development team since its inception in the 1980s, as scenario writer and game designer Yuji Horii, character designer Akira Toriyama, and music composer Koichi Sugiyama have handled their respective roles on every major game in the series. The original concepts, used since the first game, took elements from the Western role-playing games Wizardry and Ultima. A great deal of care was taken to make the gameplay intuitive so that players could easily start to play the game. The series features a number of religious overtones which were heavily censored in the Western NES versions.
Kaori Ikeda (Kaori Ikeda, February 27, 1984 -) is a Japanese actress from Tokyo Metropolitan area. In 2011, she renamed the arts name from Ikeda Kaori to Ikeda Furukami, but in 2015, she will return to the current stage name Ikeda Kaori. Missing piece belongs.
Naoko Yoshino (Naoko Yoshino, December 10, 1967) is a harp player.
Her father was Credit Suisse Bank Ltd. Shinji Yoshino (1929-). She was born in London, her father's hometown. Her mother is Harp player Atsuko Yoshino. Her mother's brother is a historical archer, Hirai Sei. According to her father's transfer, she is in the United States, and she started to learn harp from Susan McDonald in Los Angeles from the age of six. Shee won the second place in the 1st Rome International Harp Competition in 1981 and won the 9th Israeli International Harp Competition in 1985 at the youngest 17-year-old of the participants and was well-known for its name. In the same year, won the Allion Award.
The first CD "Arabesque" was released in 1987, becoming more popular. In the same year, she received Muramatsu Prize, and won the Art Festival Award in 1988. In 1989, Mobil Music Award Encouragement Prize, 1991 Art Prize Newcomer Award.
She majored in art history at International Christian University. She didn't go to music university because she felt uncomfortable to go on to Japanese music university and she felt like a normal person.
So far, the conductor's performers include Zubin Mehta, Giuseppe Sinopoli, Seiji Ozawa, Kazuyoshi Akiyama, Wolfgang Savarisch etc. In chamber music, she performed with Viola's Nobuko Imai, Flute's Jean-Pierre Lampall, Wolfgang Schulz, Kudo Shigenori, Sakuma Yumiko and others. She was also frequently invited to temporary orchestras such as the Lucerne Festival Orchestra and the Saito-Kinen Orchestra, and at the Lucerne Music Festival 2007, under the direction of Claudio Abad, she was responsible for Mahler's Symphony No. 3 in D minor's harp part. .
Pascal Rophé (born 16 June 1960) is a French conductor, currently the musical director of the Orchestre national des Pays de la Loire. He is known for collaboration with contemporary composers, conducting the premieres of their works and recording. He also teaches master classes at the Conservatoire de Paris.
Born in Paris, Rophé studied as early as 1974 at the Conservatoire de Paris, first studying the flute. He won second prize of a competition of young conductors at the Besançon International Music Festival in 1988.
From 1992, he worked with Pierre Boulez and David Robertson within the Ensemble InterContemporain. On 19 May 1998, Rophé conducted the premiere of Salvatore Sciarrino's opera Luci mie traditrici at the Schwetzingen Festival. He recorded in 2002 Thierry Escaich's Concerto pour orgue with organist Olivier Latry. The recording won the Diapason d'Or de l'Année award. The same year, he recorded Intrada by Éric Tanguy [fr] with the Orchestre national de France at the Salle Olivier Messiaen of the Maison de la Radio [fr] during the Festival "Présences 99" (2002). He conducted in 2005 the premiere of Michael Mantler's Concerto for Marimba and Vibraphone with the hr-Sinfonieorchester.
From 2006 to 2009, Rophé was musical director of the Orchestre Philharmonique de Liège. In 2011, he premiered Akhmatova, Bruno Mantovani's last opera, at the Paris Opera. He conducted Phosphor, a concerto for percussion and orchestra by Johannes Schöllhorn, played by its dedicatee Pascal Pons, in October 2006 for the French premiere at the Musica Festival in Strasbourg and the Belgian premiere in Liège. They recorded in 2007 Tout un monde lointain... for cello and orchestra by Henri Dutilleux, with soloist Marc Coppey.
In September 2014, Rophé became musical director of the Orchestre national des Pays de la Loire. In 2016, he recorded with the orchestra works by Dutilleux to mark the composer's centenary, including Le Loup, 3 Sonnets de Jean Cassou and Fille du Diable. He conducted the BBC's celebration of the centenary called Total Immersion Day: the Magical Soundworld of Henri Dutilleux, selecting five pieces: Tout un monde lointain ..., Métaboles, a concerto for orchestra, the string quartet Ainsi la nuit, The Shadows of Time for three children's voices and orchestra, and Le temps l'horloge for soprano and orchestra.
Rophé was re-appointed as orchestra director in 2017 for three years. He premiered on 10 March 2017 with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France the second symphony Âme ("soul") by Philippe Schoeller [fr], written on a commission by Radio France.
Kazuhiko Sato (Kazuhiko Sato, March 17, 1937-May 13, 2006) is a Japanese history scholar.
Born in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture. After graduating from Tokai High School in 1959, he graduated from Waseda University's First Literature Department, 1965. He entered the University of Tokyo Archives 68, assistant in 69, assistant professor in Tokyo Gakugei University Education in 75, professor, retired in 2000. Professor, Faculty of Literature, Teikyo University. When he participated in the Koyama Kenken Memorial Symposium held at Wakayama Prefectural Library on May 13, 2006, he collapsed immediately after asking questions at the discussion time and was taken to hospital but soon died of acute heart failure. He received a doctorate degree in literature from Waseda University in 1981, "The Theory of North-South Ascension."
Philippe Herrewege (or Philippe Herreweghe. Flemish: Philippe Herreweghe, May 2nd, 1947-) is a Belgian conductor. He is known as a specialist in German music, and is particularly good at Bach and the new Vienna School. Today, he is recognized by major Bach researchers as one of the pioneers of Bach playing by period playing method based on orthodox historical history, and also from the recording number of over 60, the face of the label "Harmonia Mundi France" It is considered one of the
From Gent. Spend the boyhood as a Jeong boy choir. Because he was a doctor's family, he majored in psychology at Gent University's School of Medicine to become a psychiatrist, but at the same time he studied the initial keyboard instruments (organ and harpsichord) in addition to piano at the Gent Conservatory. As a professional musician in the 1970s, he started directing and founded Collegium Vokale Gent and abandoned medicine.
Soon after, Nicolaus Harnoncourt and Gustav Leonhard attracted attention to the interpretation of the music, and they were invited by Collegium Vocale Gent to participate in the recording of the complete Bach Cantata by both parties.
Lively, gradually became acclaimed in each country by the interpretation of orthodox eloquent baroque music, established another ancient music ensemble chapel royale in Paris in 1977, to perform the music of the French Golden Age It will be. From this point on, he will try to play a proper interpretation of everything from Renaissance music to contemporary music, with several performance groups at the hip. In this way, he led European music ensembles specializing in renaissance music, the Champs Elysees Orchestra of classical music orchestras specializing in romantic music, and ensemble musicic oblique specializing in 20th century music. Among ancient musicians, it is rare to be the leader of so many performance groups.
Arakawa Yoji (Arakawa Ohji, April 18, 1949) is a contemporary poet writer and essayist in Japan. Professor Aichi Shukutoku University. The reading of the real name is extensive.
He was born in Mikuni Town, Fukui Prefecture. He graduated from Fukui Prefectural Fujishima High School, Waseda University First Literature Department literary arts department. The "Study Theory" submitted as a graduation thesis received the Ono Akira Memorial Art Prize for its recommendation by Atsushi Hiraoka. He published the poem collection "Water Station" at the age of 26 and received the "H" award, and has since published many poems, essays and critiques. He is also a reader of modern Japanese novels. Manages Shiyosha, a publisher specializing in poetry since 1974. He teaches at Osaka Literature School, Aoyama Gakuin University, and Waseda University. In 2013, Professor at Aichi Shukutoku University.
"The miner Totchi turned on electricity," he wrote, "There are a lot of research by Miyazawa Kenji. It is convenient for research. That's it." And criticized a poet who is crowded with one poet. It is developing a keen point that does not get caught in the party fact in both poetry and essay. A long-time literary review, the critics of Oe Kenzaburo and Yuri Ogino are very different, and they are not unique in making so-called 'buntan' remarks. Named "contemporary poet writer" instead of "poet".
On November 14th, 2006, in the corner of the radio program "Arimori Morimoto, standby!", "Antenna at topic 8 o'clock all over Japan", it was revealed that the reading of the name was "Arakawa Hiroharu". When he was 26 years old, he said that he had come to mention himself as "youji" was rubbed in the "person" column of "Asahi Shimbun".
It may refer to:
Billman Shinpei
He started violin from 3 years old. He graduated from Tokyo Metropolitan University of Music Faculty of Music High School Attached Music. After graduating from the university, he graduated from the Lausanne High School of Music. He completed the master's course of the same graduate school.
He completed an academy of Sinfonietta de Lausanne in Lausanne (Switzerland).
Kyoto Music Competition Gold Medal Encouragement Prize at the age of eight. 3rd place in All Japan Student Music Competition (junior high school). Winner of the Japanese Music Contest. He won the YBP international competition. Osaka International Competition third place finish.
He has attended master classes by Zahar Bron, George Pauk and Ivry Gitris.
He hold solo recitals at Sumida Triphony Hall, Hachioji Olympus Hall, Hotel Nikko Tokyo, Hino City Brick Hall, etc.
As a soloist, he performed with the late Revolution ensemble led by Chika Tanaka, Masahiro Yano leaded by Grand Gala Orchestra OSAKA, and Sinfonietta de Lausanne led by Alexander Mayer.
As a member of Camerata de Lausanne, led by Pierre Amoyal, will perform concerts and tours throughout Europe, such as Lausanne, Moscow, Istanbul, Paris.
He has also appeared in numerous concerts such as solo concerts, chamber music and concert masters.
From January 2016, the New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, principal player (contract).
He has studied with Akira Yamamoto, Chihiro Kudo, Kazuki Sawa, Takashi Shimizu and Pierre Amoyal.
Birthday: 07July, 1985
Gender: male
Blood: A
Birthplace: Hyogo Prefecture
Residence: Tokyo
Through Tokyo High School of Music University attached music high school,Graduated from Tokyo Art University Composition Course. Composed by Sato Sato, Nobuo Fukushi,Studied under Mr. Hiroshi Aoshima.
"Salto for Orchestra" composed while attending schoolIs played by Geiko Philharmonia.Other dedications of songs to Atami, donations of songs to Syria,There are creative musical "Taketori Monogatari" and choir songs.
In arrangement, "Cinema's Symphony-by Yomiuri Symphony Orchestra-Masterpiece reviving with the symphony orchestra ""Yomiuri Japan Hibiki Grand Concert featuring SusanBoyle in Budokan "Orchestra arrangement at the concert,A supplement to the "Kawasaki Neiiro", which was made on the 80th anniversary of the founding of Kawasaki CityProduced in the field of choral arrangement, video game and animationArrange activities. Major works include Xbox 360 "Blue Dragon"Lost Odyssey, Nintendo DSFinal Fantasy III Opening "Orchestral arrangement, “Kingdom HeartsPiano Collections, "Pearcons II",Unusual classic CD with over 10,000 hits "Ghibli the"Classics", CD of arrange work are also numerous.
Appeared in many concerts as a pianist,Co-starring with Japan Philharmonic, film,Piano recording of TV commercial music,Arrangement and performance of piano trio version by live of Suzuki Ami,“Kapris” used when Mao Asada's figure skatingThere are various activities, such as the performance ofReceived the Best Accompanist Award at the Tokyo Voice Music Competition.The Warsaw Exchange Festival tour organized by NHK in 200 years of Chopin's birth last yearTo play Chopin in Warsaw Paris and take a bath.Currently NHK culture course "piano songs, songs and performances" "How to read the score "Aoyama, Saitama, Toyocho, Sakai, Kawagoe, Hachioji,Lecturer of Machida classroom. (2011/8/12)
Nobuko Tanaka is a Japanese vocalist. She is from Kumamoto Prefecture. She was born February 10, 1980. A member of the Tokyo Second Term. Her husband is a vocalist Yoshihiko Kitagawa. Until the middle of 2018, she was active under the name Shoko Sawamura.
Completed the 53rd term master class of the second term opera training institute. She awarded the Excellence Award and Encouragement Award as an Outstanding Student at the end of March 27, 2010 (2010).
She has appeared in many opera operettas and has a wide repertoire from the first half of the 16th century to today.
In 2012, it was selected as the title roll for the commemorative performance opera "Children and magic" (composition: Maurice Ravel), celebrating the 60th anniversary of its founding, and its 2,621 people (as of October 1, 2012) It is also selected among the four female voices of the 2nd session Meister Zinger, a vocal ensemble group selected from among the overcoming 2nd session members.
The 50th anniversary performance "The Marriage of Figaro" Cervino (performance date November 23, 2012) was cast off for pregnancy, but the Kyoto City Symphony Music on December 27, 2012 Dan appeared in the Kyoto Concert Hall "9th Concert". Resumed activities from the Tokyo Operetta Theater on June 8, 2013, and the composer O. J. Offenbach "The Jeollastan's Woman Grand Prince".
In addition, we play as a member of "two-period Meister Zinger" at the sports festival Tokyo 2013 (The 68th National Physical Education Competition and the 13th National Sports Festival for the Disabled) meeting from September to October 2013 and broadcast to the whole country through NHK It was done.
There is no schedule or ticket right now.
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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tokyo", "Miyata Da", "Takeshi Oi", "Ozawa Seiji", "Nobuko Imai", "Ikeda Kaori", "Dragon Quest", "Aki Miyagawa", "Yoshino Naoko", "Sato Kazuhiko", "Tanaka Tokiko", "Masahiko Enkoji", "Ikuyo Nakamichi", "Arakawa Hiroshi", "Fumiaki Kuriyama", "Toshiyuki Kamioka", "Philippe Herevech", "Alexei Vorodin (piano)", "Michiyoshi Inoue (conductor)", "New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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