Toshi Ichiyanagi
Toshi Ichiyanagi (一柳 慧 Ichiyanagi Toshi, born 4 February 1933) is a Japanese composer and pianist.
Ichiyanagi was born in Kobe. He studied with Tomojirō Ikenouchi, Kishio Hirao [fr; ja], and John Cage. One of his most notable works is the 1960 composition Kaiki, which combined Japanese instruments, shō and koto, and western instruments, harmonica and saxophone. Another work, Distance (1961), required the performers to play from a distance of three meters from their instruments. Anima 7 (1964) stated that chosen action should be performed "as slowly as possible".
Ichiyanagi was married to Yoko Ono from 1956 to 1963.
Ichiyanagi is the recipient of the 33rd Suntory Music Award (2001) and the Foundation for Contemporary Arts John Cage Award (2018). He has been honored with Japan's Order of Culture.
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Flux-Concert

Pitfall

Heroic Purgatory
A Town Not Yet Seen

The World of Pulses - Electronics and Living Organism

ERYTHROPOIEISIS AND ERYTHROPOIETIN

THE BONE

THE BONE II

Everything Visible Is Empty

Saya: Perspective in Love

The Ondekoza

Metastasis

Farewell to the Summer Light

Expansion

Atman

The Story of Big 1: Sadaharu Oh

A Story Written with Water

Coup d'Etat

Oxed-man

Closed Vagina

Confessions Among Actresses
The Room

Hokaibito: Ina no Seigetsu
Tragedy on the G Line
The River - Poem of Wrath

The Wangan Highway

Sculptures by Sofu - Vita

Kachi Kachi Yama

The Solar Thread

Why Not: A Serenade of Eschatological Ecology

Jun

Eros + Massacre
