Following the solo electro-acoustic masterpiece Catch-Wave, recorded in late 1974, Japanese avant-garde legend
Takehisa Kosugi's next work grew from a radio session recorded at NHK-Radio's Tokyo studio in September 1975. Featuring
Kosugi alongside former
John Cage disciple
Toshi Ichiyanagi (also first husband to
Yoko Ono) as well as
Karlheinz Stockhausen percussionist Michael Ranta, the two untitled improvisations -- just under 22 and 23 minutes, respectively -- drew from much the same cloth as
Kosugi's earlier work, with a new emphasis on small-ensemble interaction. Though drawn from live playing, the music -- especially owing to
Kosugi and
Ichiyanagi's ring modulators -- feels more akin to the musique concrète experimentation of Catch-Wave, recorded almost a year earlier. Sources (seem to) include gongs, piano, a bass piano, melodica, dripping water, violin, and traditional Japanese instrumentation. The first side is based around a
Kosugi violin drone, building into a series of interruptions and resolutions before a passage driven by Ranta's melodic percussion, in some places recalling some of Ranta's work with microtonal composer
Harry Partch. By contrast, the second piece begins with heavy percussion, before thinning into a long, leisurely space.
Kosugi was no stranger to collective improvisation. He was -- between 1959 and 1963 -- a founding member of the Fluxus-collaborating Group Ongaku, the first improvising unit in the Japanese avant-garde. Following a stint scoring a sci-fi cartoon, Atom Boy, for Japanese television, he founded environmental jammers the Taj Mahal Travelers, who preferred playing on beaches and hillsides to clubs and festivals. A step back from the grand, transformative scale of the Travelers,
Improvisation Sep. 1975 is no less encompassing and enchanting. ~ Jesse Jarnow