* En anglais uniquement
Tatsuya Nakatani is a creative improvisor and sound artist known for his radical, transformative approaches to playing percussion. He often utilizes bows and found objects, as well as conventional sticks and mallets, in order to play various configurations of drums, cymbals, gongs, bells, and singing bowls. His music is intensely visceral, flowing from periods of droning near-silence to chaotic eruptions, and he's able to conjure up tones reminiscent of strings, horns, or electronics out of his source material. Active since the late '90s, he has toured extensively throughout the world, presenting workshops and lectures in addition to giving solo and collaborative performances. He has appeared on dozens of recordings, from solo works such as 2004's Green Report 12 and 2010's Abiogenesis to collaborations with
Assif Tsahar,
Eugene Chadbourne,
Makoto Kawabata,
William Parker, and countless others. Additionally, he has toured with the Nakatani Gong Orchestra since 2011; the ensemble released their self-titled debut recording in 2012.
Originally from Osaka, Japan,
Nakatani moved to the United States in 1994. Based in the Boston area, he began performing and releasing self-issued cassettes during the late '90s. He was an early member of Bhob Rainey and
Greg Kelley's improvisational group
Nmperign, and additionally collaborated with musicians such as Michael Bullock and
Curt Newton. He began collaborating with saxophonist
Assif Tsahar during the early 2000s, performing as part of his New York Underground Orchestra, whose debut The Labyrinth appeared in 2002.
Nakatani also participated in projects such as Blue Collar (with
Nate Wooley), Masashi Harada Condanction Ensemble, and Cyclorama, additionally performing in
the Billy Bang Quintet. 13 Definitions of Truth (with double bassist
Peter Kowald) was issued by Quakebasket and Locust Music in 2003.
Nakatani's solo album Green Report 12 was released through his own H&H Production in 2004; the imprint also released Six Improvisations (For Guitar Bass and Drums), the debut by MAP, which featured
Nakatani along with guitarist
Mary Halvorson and bassist
Clayton Thomas. Come Sunday, a collaboration with
Tsahar, appeared on Hopscotch Records that year.
Nakatani worked with Ricardo Arias and Vic Rawlings under the name N.R.A., releasing two CDs in 2004-2005, and additionally played in From Between Trio with Jack Wright and
Michel Doneda.
In 2005,
Nakatani collaborated with bassist Todd Nicholson and guitarist Eiji Obata, releasing the bossa nova-influenced Mott Haven under the name Yukijurushi. Solitude, with
Tsahar and KJLA String 4tet, was released by Hopscotch in 2006. In 2007,
Nakatani released solo disc Primal Communication as well as two collaborations with
Gary Hassay and
Dan DeChellis (the trio released a third effort, Ritual Joy, in 2010).
Nakatani worked with Neil Davidson and
Raymond MacDonald as Aporias Trio, releasing Entre Nous in 2009. MAP's
Fever Dream, featuring bassist
Reuben Radding instead of
Clayton Thomas, was released by Taiga in 2010. Also during the year,
Nakatani's collaboration with Forbes Graham, Essences, was issued by Blaq Lghtn, and solo album Abiogenesis appeared on H&H. In 2011,
Nakatani released collaborative albums with
Doneda,
Kaoru Watanabe, and
Eugene Chadbourne, in addition to appearing on
Rafael Toral's
Space Elements Vol. III. Ritual Inscription, a live collaboration with
Kris Tiner and
Jeremy Drake, was issued by Epigraph Records in early 2012. That year, Taiga released Nakatani Gong Orchestra, the eponymous debut by
Nakatani's performance ensemble. He also guested on
Blues Control's
Valley Tangents, issued by
Drag City.
2013 releases included
3 on a Thin Line (with
Harold Rubin and
Barre Phillips), Anatomy of a Moment (with
Shane Perlowin), and solo album Present Presence. Solo releases Confirmation and Gong appeared in 2015, as did Charades (with
Doneda). The following year,
Nakatani released Live in Oita 2016, a collaboration with
Acid Mothers Temple leader
Makoto Kawabata, and
I Got It Bad, a duo with
Tsahar. Nakatani Gong Orchestra's Live Concert at Silo City appeared in 2017. In 2018, RareNoise released
The Unknowable,
Nakatani's collaboration with
David Liebman and
Adam Rudolph. The year also brought recordings with Mark Weaver (Weaver Nakatani) and
Jeff Coffin (Flight). ~ Paul Simpson