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| SEVENTH
GARDEN |
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Quietude, silence... Familiar yet unknown sounds that redefine the parameters of music.
A condensed version of the Sound Garden installation Shimizu created for
Pacific Flora 2004's Dream Garden Factory, this album expresses the "garden of the mind" in
a careful mix of sonic fragments premised on silence as the source of all sound.

2004 (CD)
Victor Entertainment VICL-61390 |
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| 1. |
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Zasso |
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| 2. |
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Magic stone |
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| 3. |
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Momo no hana |
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Mushi |
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| 5. |
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Hana ga saitara |
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| 6. |
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Industria botanica |
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| 7. |
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Elizabeth |
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| 8. |
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Suiteki |
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| 9. |
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Destiny No.1 |
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| 10. |
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Yuki |
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Composed and produced by Yasuaki Shimizu
"Momo no Hana": new recording of the 1984
unreleased track from Kiren
"Hana ga Saitara": new recording of the
1983 release on Mariah's Utakata
no Hibi
Yasuaki Shimizu: tenor saxophone, xylophone, bar chime, electronics,
Hibari Childresn's Chorus: vocals (1,5)
Satoshi Sakakibara: conductor (1,5)
Miyako Koda: voice (3)
Tamami
Shiraishi: soprano (6)
Etsuko Yoshida: humming (7)
Recorded by Yasuaki Shimizu at Submarine, Kazunori Yoshida (1, 5) at Sound City
(Tokyo)
Recorded/mixed by Shinji Kano at Pathway (Tokyo)
Quotes
"Seventh Garden is wonderful, pretty, understated, funny and an accomplished
extension of that unique musical vocabulary or perspective which has origins
in Time and Again and the treatments of the Bach material. An individual
voice. Well done."
— David Cunningham, producer/composer
"Why had I never realized a children's chorus harbored this kind of potential?
Feigning naïveté then suddenly becoming petulant is something only
Yasuaki Shimizu can pull off. Uncannily poised beats and listlessly comforting
soprano—like trying to skip on a trampoline. Hit it right, and you soar;
be caught off guard, and you tumble. That too, is part of the fun."
— Shuhei Hosokawa, music critic
YS notes
I set out to make
an album on the "garden" theme. I'm not talking here about a garden with flowers
and trees, but rather a "garden of the mind." I initially developed the concept
for the Dream Garden Factory, then took it a next step further by concentrating
everything onto a disc. While the 8-hour time frame for the Sound Garden afforded
an approach that builds on silence as the central element, the time constraint
of a CD was another reality. What appeared to be a hurdle at first, turned out
to be groundless worry. Linear time is nonexistent in the "spiritual
garden," and the measurement of time isn't applicable to sound anyway.
Press release
Six Soundscapes for Gardens
Sound emerges from silence, and in the Sound Garden, silence
is the central "sonic" element that flirts with subtle noises in each of the
six theme gardens. This concept emerged from the awareness that we live rather
unconsciously with the barrage of sound that fills our every day. The kaleidoscopically
minimal soundscapes visitors experience in the Sound Garden were resized to
fit the space constraints of a CD, in various approaches that make use of such
elemental restrictions in a constructive way.
For the opener "Zasso," sixty some names of weeds were sung and recorded one
by one. While in the Sound Garden these form single entities that kick in every
now and then, the album version required a tighter arrangement that resulted
in a surprisingly harmonic combination of children's chorus and saxophone.
"Elizabeth" is a composition originally made for the two multichannel
speakers (of the same name) designed specially for the Sound Garden. A
humming
female voice
from the speakers in the
center "interacts" with bird
sounds
audible from seven small
speakers arranged in a circle around it. Like "Zasso," what
was once a loose arrangement of sounds and silence appears here in the compact
format of a "song."
"Mono no Hana" and "Hana ga Saitara" are reworks of pieces originally included
in Shimizu's unreleased recording Kiren and the
Mariah
album Utakata no Hibi (1983). The
lyrics on "Hana ga Saitara" are
interpreted this time by Miyako Koda from Dip In The Pool, "Momo no Hana" comes
across with the same growing tension as Ravel's "Bolero" — albeit a rustic
Japanese
edition.
The album further offers ventures into rhythmic, sine wave-based electronica,
a soprano rendition of flower names in Italian ("Industria Botanica"), Shimizu's trademark sonic collage ("Destiny No. 1"), and an original baroque-style composition for sampled celesta ("Yuki").
Press review
The Japan Times, 2004
While most ambient music evokes a place
or an ambience figuratively, (Brian Eno's "Music for Airports" was,
after all, not composed for a departure lounge), Yasuaki Shimizu's latest musical
challenge was to create music that worked on both a literal and metaphoric
level. His current release, "Seventh Garden," was originally composed
as the "soundscape" for the massive Pacific Flora 2004 exhibition
currently running in Shizuoka.
Playing in eight-hour cycles through a specially designed, flower-shaped speaker
system, "Seventh Garden" accompanies visitors as they wander through
the flora (and in some of the more avant-garde installments, robots and glass-blown
figures) that make up the six consecutive gardens of the central exhibit, the "Dream
Garden Factory."
In lesser hands, this could easily have become a cliche of singing birds and
falling water, or worse, another dreary, droning electronica piece. But Shimizu's
saxophone renditions of Bach's Cello Suites have shown him to be a master of
balancing silence, sound and echo, a skill well used on "Seventh Garden."
The record begins with a children's chorus reciting the names of different
kinds of weeds. Spare and spacious, it achieves the solemnity of a Gregorian
chant. Other tracks on the album venture into more electronic realms, complete
with sine waves and unidentifiable throbs and bleeps, but like Shimizu's Bach,
the music always gently swings. Both augmenting the scenery of the garden while
also becoming a sonic sculpture in itself, it is truly the "seventh garden" of
the exhibition, what Shimizu has described as a "garden of the mind."
— Suzannah Tartan
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