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Toki no Kodama Part 2 (echoes of 20th Century) ~ hommage to 20th century pops ~(ALCD-3066)
Kiyonori Sokabe plays 20th Century pops trans-figurated by contemporary music composers
Here there
and Everywhere / John
Lennon & Paul McArtney / Kyo Ichinose
Zephyros in C
Ama Pola
/ J.M.Lacalle / Masao Nobuhara
Cornet in Bb
Premier on the hill of sun
set
/ Kyohei Tsutsumi / Takashi Niigaki
Trumpet in C
Happy birthday,
Mr.President. / Mildred
J. Hill and Patty Smith Hil / Satoru Wono
Trumpet in Bb
La Internacio
/ Pierre Deygeter /
Formant
Brothers (Nobuyasu Sakonda + Miwa Masahiro)
Trumpet in Bb and Piccolo Trumpet in Bb
I got rythm
and played tennis with Mr. Soenberg / George Gershwin + Arnold
Soenberg / Kyo Yoshida
Zephyros in Bb
Summertime
/ George Gershwin / Yoshihiro Nakagawa
Trumpet in C
My Favorite
things / Richard Rodgers
/ Rica
Narimoto
Piccolo trumpet in A, Cornet in Bb, Trumpet in C
PunctuationV(My
Funny Valentine) / Richard
Rodgers / Haruyuki
Suzuki
Trumpet in C
And I love
her / John Lennon &
Paul McArtney / Yoriaki
Matsudaira + Takashi Niigaki
Trumpet in C
West slide
story / Motoharu Kawashima
Zerphyros in C
Here there
and Everywhere(Coda mix) / John
Lennon & Paul McArtney / Kyo Ichinose
Zephyros in C
Toki no Kodama Part 1 (echoes of 20th Century) ~ hommage to 20th century pops ~(ALCD-3057)
Kiyonori Sokabe plays 20th Century pops trans-figurated by contemporary music composers
Gersomina-Distanza/Nino Rota/Yoshifumi Tanaka
Trumpet in C and Piano
With a little help from my friends/John Lennon & Paul McArtney/Takuro Shibayama
Trumpet in C/Zephyros in C & Piano
TWILIGHT OF THE ULTRAS - Seven vs Zarathustra/Toru Fuyuki+Richard
Strauss/Kunihiko Goto
Cornet in B flat & Percussion
Let it be Asian Tour/John Lennon & Paul McArtney/Masahiro
Miwa to Kiyonori Sokabe
Flugelhorn/Trumpet in C/Picc.trp in A & Synthesizer
GET UP STAND UP/ BOB MARLEY/Tomoko Fukui
2 Picc.Trpts in B flat , Trp in C , Trp in B flat
Michelle/John
Lennon & Paul McArtney/Toshio Nakagawa
Trumpet in C & Piano
Scarborough Fair/Traditional/Simon & Garfunkel/Hiroyuki
Yamamoto
Trumpet in B flat
first love/Hikaru
Utada/Keiko Harada
Zephyros in C and Piano
Thanks to night fog/Kuranosuke Hamaguchi/Haruyuki Suzuki
Zephyros in C and Synthesizer
So Danco Samba(BRAZIL ONDO)/Tom Jobim/Sunao Isaji
Trumpet in C and Piano
limpid
solitude(ALCD-55)
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Soumei Sato/Light
Masataka Matsuo/Distraction IV for Trumpet and Piano (1998)
Akira Nishimura/Halos, for Trumpet and Piano
Jo Kondo/Durante L'Inverno
Sunao Isaji/Fanfaria
Toshio Nakagawa/Etudes for Lip, Tongue, Teeth, Throat - For Trumpet Player and Keyboard Player
Toru Takemitsu/Paths
Kiyonori Sokabe and Trumpet Creativity
By Jo Kondo (composer)
A musical instrument is not merely a tool for producing music. It has a unique power, the power as a source from which music can be born. A true musician, whether a composer of a performer, does not just show off his skill at handling the instrument as a tool for the purpose of his own self expression. Rather, he takes into himself the power of the instrument and, by giving it form, he draws on that power in order to create his music. A tool is something that is continually improved until it becomes perfected as the ideal tool for performing a given function. For an instrument-as-power, however, there is no such perfection. This is because its power is that of potential and potential is something that is continually developed toward the future. The creation of a new piece of music requires a new power, which stated differently means, it requires a new instrument. However, this does not mean you must continue to invent new instruments. Even if it is an instrument of the same form and function as other instruments, when it becomes the object of fresh imagination and creative spirit on the part of the individual musician or composer it has the potential to be rediscovered as an instrument with new power. It is possible to find any number of different power is one instrument. That is the responsibility of the person who would create music.
This is why the names of instruments
should always be used not in the singular but in the plural. A
trumpet is not always the same trumpet.
The number of different trumpets is equal to the number of musicians,
the number of composers and the number of pieces that are written.
Possessed of a unique performing style deriving from exceptional
technique and a deep sense of music, the trumpeter Kiyonori Sokabe
is one of the few musicians who is sharply aware of this creative
pluralness of musical instruments. His tenacious pioneering spirit
as a musician has not only given birth to the Zephyros trumpet
with its new functions and the works on this CD with their many
uniquely different ideas, but has also given expression to the
power of the instrument that is the trumpet and, ultimately, to
the creativity inherent in the act of musical performance.
Soumei Sato/Light
The piece Light was composed on commission for the Art at St.
Anns and first performed at St. Anns Church in New York in 1986
with Stephen Burns on trumpet and Margaret Leng-Tan on the piano.
During the 1970s I was focusing on compositions deriving from
new modes and harmonics. In this piece the melody is drawn out
from the resonance of multi-layered modes and, eventually, the
line of the melody threading through a sea of resonance expansive
as the sky begins to generate light. The title Light was chosen
as a result of this kind of aural impression from the imagination.
(Soumei Sato)
* The Japan debut of this piece was performed at the Tokyo Bunka-kaikan
Hall on Jan. 5, 1996, with Kiyonori Sokabe on trumpet and Toshio
Nakagawa on piano.
Akira Nishimura/Halos, for Trumpet
and Piano
In the old Greek Orthodox temples of Istanbul (formerly Constantinople)
you can still find many icon images of Christ, the Mother Mary
and the Angel Gabriel whose bodies were pealed away and halos
scraped off by the Muslims when the Ottoman Turk Empire ruled
the city in the middle of the 15th century. Standing before the
painful sight of these icons, I was deeply moved, and this inspiration
led to the writing of this composition.
The part played by the trumpet is from the Byzantine chant Koinonikon,
''Spiritus tuus bonus, Domine,
deducit me. Allaluia'' Here, the original melody of the chant
has been given liberal kalophonic variations and further segmented
with the addition of heterogeneous tones (allophones)and rests.
Meanwhile, in juxtaposition to the chant, the piano introduces
halos of resonance, halos that are deeply scarred.
First performance: Tsuda Hall Dec 12, 1998, Kiyonori Sokabe (trumpet),
Toshio Nakagawa (piano)
Commission, Publication: Zen Ongaku Sho Publishers
Jo Kondo/Durante L'Inverno
The trio for violin, trumpet and piano Durante L'Inverno was written in December of 1995 and
first performed by Kiyonori Sokabe, Madoka Sato and Masanori Kato
at the recital 'Genzaikei no
Ongaku '95'
held that same month in Tokyo. It is a work written in response
to a request from my close long-time friend, Kiyonori Sokabe,
for a 'new type of chamber piece
for trumpet.' This piece is very
close in nature to another trio for a different set of instruments
Winsen Dance Step (flute vibraphone, piano) composed in September
of that same year. In other words, these two are sister pieces.
When two pieces that, though they may not be called identical,
are extremely similar in terms of the musical material called
into play and the methodology of composition used are composed
for two completely different sets of instruments, the musical
result should naturally be quite different as a reflection of
the differences in the characters of the instruments involved.
It was precisely in this area that my primary interest lay, from
a compositional standpoint, with these two pieces.
Sunao Isaji/Fanfaria
With the trumpet as 'solo' and the other three intruments as ''accompaniment'',
the roles of the performers are clearly defined. I have a sense
of the 'solo' as being play in a contorted and drawn out way that
doesn't ''thread'' the melody out so much as ''setting it flowing.''
With the exception of the final section of the piece, the ''accompaniment''
is not predetermined, and, with the exception of the piano, the
makeup of the instruments has been different with each performance.
At the maiden performance the piano was joined by a flute, the
composer and a reading. After that, it was performed with variations
like piano plus the composer, piano only and piano plus violin
and the composer. Not predetermined does not mean uncertain. It
is one way of seeking to design ''perfect time'' from the conditions
available at different times.
The piece was first performed in January of 1996 at the Tokyo
Contemporary Music Festival ''Theater Winter 95/96'', having been
composed for part of the closed acoustic theater play Bodas de
sangre (based on theoriginal play by the Spanish poet Federico
Garcia Lorca). At the time of the maiden performance, an Epilogue
titled Le entrada del bosque in which the strong 'solo' is completely
broken down was added, and along with Fanfaria there was also
the title Tsuki no Nikuhen.
Masataka Matsuo/Distraction IV
for Trumpet and Piano (1998)
As my life work in the area of chamber music my intention has
been to compose a group of solo pieces for the primary instruments
and a group of duo pieces with piano. The solo pieces I call my
Phono Series and the duets my Distraction Series. Therefore, this
work Distraction IV represents the fourth work in my duet series
following composition I for clarinet, II for flute and III for
violin. In this piece, the piano part written in an extremely
limited vocabulary is contrasted with the freely wandering trumpet
part to produce acoustic wave patterns in the performance space.
Furthermore, the piano is employed not only as an instrument but
also as an acoustic body for the trumpet.
This piece was composed for the "1998
Trumpet Festival" organized
through the cooperation of the Japan Society for Contemporary
Music and the Japan Trumpet Society and was first performed by
the duo of Kiyonori Sokabe and Toshio Nakagawa. I am deeply grateful
to Mr. Sokabe for his in valuable advice during the composing
of this piece and for breathing life into it with his performance.
Toshio Nakagawa/Etudes for Lip,
Tongue, Teeth, Throat - For Trumpet Player and Keyboard Player
This piece can be perceived as a sort of patchwork. The materials
being stitched together can be divided into three basic categories.
The first is a bright 4/4 beat march that appears to be in the
style of Messiaen. This is performed in various ways with changes
in expression and tempo. Next are the parts that, as the title
of the piece suggests, seek purely to explore the possibilities
of the organs of the mouth, with the sense of rhythm being very
ambiguous or even nonexistent. Then, making up most of the elements
of the whole, there are parts with a middle-of-the-road character
that can not be classified as either of these two. These serve
mainly to bridge the gap between the two former parts which are
extremely alien to each other in character.
As is always the case with my works, the overall composition is
variable and fluid, and the performers through discourse among
themselves determine the way the materials (fragments) will be
put together or layered one on the other. There are also spaces
prepared where the performers can interject improvisational passages
or introduce their own materials while watching the reactions
of the composer, and there is also here the proposition of a new
form of oral tradition. For example, there are parts interjected
at frequent intervals where one sound or a short improvisation
of about one second are allowed, and in this case the improvisations
are not required but written in as a number of ''realization''
passages that the performer can choose from and play as they are,
or he can take them as reference and improvise completely new
passages or play passages that he has planned out beforehand.
The influence that these fragmented sounds have on the overall
piece is very large. I believe there are still many possibilities
left in the practice of working chance operation or improvisation
into the structure of a composition that most composers have abandoned.
I find myself unable to simply take the same stance as many of
my seniors who have taken a small sampling of these methods and
then discarded them.... But, in saying so, I do not wish to imply
that finding new solutions is at all an easy thing....
(This piece was commissioned for the Kiyonori Sokabe Trumpet Recital
of Jan. 4, 1996)
Toru Takemitsu/Paths
Since there is a comment that the composer himself wrote for the
1994 Hakan Hardenberger Recital at the Suntory Hall, I would like
to beginby quoting it.
''The piece Paths for trumpet was written as a fanfare mourning
the eath of Lutoslawski. When I met Lutoslawski in Warsaw in the
spring of 1992, I was deeply impressed when he said to me, We
composers should take melody more seriously and not spare any
efforts to create new melodies. In Paths a simple (melodic) inspiration
proceeds through the subtle changes of a landscape, much like
a path through a garden.''
As this passage implies, many of Takemitsu's
compositions from his later years adopt a structure based on the
concept of a traditional Japanese walk-around type garden. Some
examples are the works Arc for Piano and Orchestra, Dream/Window
and Fantasma/Cantos. In a walk-around style garden there is no
single point from which the entire garden can be viewed. As you
proceed along its small paths, you view the garden in portions
as one scene after another reveals itself in the course of the
walk. In this piece you should be able to perceive a uniquely
Japanese concept of time and space in which the temporal act of
walking the paths and the space that is the garden interact with
each other as you proceed through it.
(Comment: Kiyonori Sokabe)
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About the Zephyros Trumpet/Kiyonori Sokabe
Most of the pieces on this CD are performed on a conventional
trumpet in C (C trumpet ), but on the Nakagawa piece alone a Zephyros
trumpet (slide-fitted trumpet) is used. In fact, it is probably
more accurate to say this piece was composed specifically for
this trumpet. This Zephyros trumpet was first proposed by me in
1993 and the first instrument constructed by a famous craftsman.
Since then, several improvements have been added to bring it to
its present state.
Specifications:
The key of the horn itself is C.
It has three pistons (same as a conventional trumpet) and one
slide which can lower the sound by an augmented fourth when the
pistons are not being pressed. By using the slide along with the
pistons, it is possible to achieve a much freer glissando than
on a trombone. Also, by using them in combination it is possible
to get subtle nuances of musical interval and other special tonal
effects.
Since it was not possible to widen
the trumpet's horn body to accommodate the slide, the Zephyros
has a slightly smaller bell (about the size of an E-flat horn)
that gives it a somewhat brighter sound.
Profiles
Toshio Nakagawa
Born in Tokyo, Nakagawa attended the Toho Gakuen University, where
he studied in the Music Department and graduate course. He studied
composition under Akira Miyoshi and piano under Yoko Moriyasu
and Katsuyo Suemitsu. In 1982 he received 1st Prize of the Music
Today Composition Awards. His wide-ranging musical activities
today include contemporary music composition, piano performance
and improvisational performance. He is also known as a hit-maker
in the TV commercial music field and his CD gathering his commercial
music for corporations like Suntory, Nissan, Shiseido and Nescafe
became a best-seller.
Chiyoko Noguchi
Noguchi entered the Tokyo National University of Fine Art and
Music via the same university's
affiliated senior high school. Noguchi then entered the Julliard
Conservatory of Music in New York and prior to graduation there
won the Young Artist Debut Award. In 1995 Noguchi graduated Magna
Cum Laude from the Tokyo National University of Fine Art and Music
and in 1996 won Honorable Mention in the Wieniawski International
Violin Competition. Presently, Noguchi is a member of the Kioi
Sintonetta Tokyo. As member also of such groups as Ensemble Nomad
and Contemporary a, Noguchi has participated in the maiden performances
of numerous new works and is also active as a recording artist.
Noguchi presently holds the position of special instructor at
Toho Gakuen College.
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This CD is a collection of representative
performances from the recent musical activities of Kiyonori Sokabe,
an artist who, through his work as lead trumpet for the experimental
performing group Musica Practica, through his own solo performances
and work with other ensembles (presently leader of the group Practica
Musica Studio) has firmly established himself as a prominent specialist
in the contemporary music genre. The pieces recorded here comprise
works by Japanese composers and works by foreign composers that
deal with themes related in a broad sense to Japan or the Orient.
Sokabe has recently been involved in projects aimed at expanding
the range and repertoire of trumpet music through such means as
the invention and development of a slide-fitted 'Zephyros' trumpet
that enables a broad range of glissando, and through the use of
computers. Sokabe alone has performed or produced all the parts
and sounds appearing in the non-solo works on this CD, including
the trumpet ensemble (Kagel) and the percussion parts in the piece
by John Cage.
Fanfanfarren
(1993) by Mauricio Kagel (1931 ~ ) is a work consisting of 12
short pieces for trumpet quartet. Here, numbers 1, 4, 9, 11, 7
and 12 are used to bracket the other works on this CD as specified
by the composer.
This is the same way Sokabe performed his program at the "New
Generation Arts Festival'97"of 1997, although the selection
of pieces is different.
Though the pieces are indeed fanfare-like in terms of their musical
form, they contain very Kagel-esque compositional methods and
ideas throughout,such as the use of deep vibrato and abundant
portament, specialized use of the mouthpiece and a different mute
for each of the four performers. Thereare also various instructions
concerning the directions the performers face and their relative
positions. In short, this work represents a dissimulation of the
traditional fanfare.
After Fanfanfarren 12 comes
the piece eco lontanissima V (1996/2000) by Yoshifumi Tanaka.
This is a work commissioned by Sokabe, who gave its premiere performance
at the 1997 concert mentioned above. For this recording, the composer
has made his second revision on the original score. Since 1993,
Tanaka has written a series of pieces for solo instruments under
this same title. This composition V was created specifically for
the slide-fitted Zephyros trumpet Sokabe invented in 1993. As
suggested by the title, achieving an echo-like sound quality is
an important part of the concept behind this piece. For this reason,
composition V uses various means such as half-valve technique
and frequent use of mutes and slides along with a variety of innovative
fingerings aimed at achieving tonal variation.
Another characteristic of this piece lies in Tanaka's unique method
for creating a temporal convention. Instead of the constructivist
type of
temporal convention attempted by avant-garde musicians of the
past, he uses a method in which be employs free association to
string together a series of musical images. However, it is usually
impossible for the listener to find traces of the associations
he has used. And, at the same time that it is not constructivist,
this point clearly distinguishes his music from the works of an
older type of composers who relied on their emotional sensibilities.
This is because the older type of compositions consist of content
aimed at communicating the flow of the composer's sentiments.
The next piece after Fanfanfarren 4 is Quarte Pieces Pour Trompette Solo(1956) by Giancinto Scelsi (1905 ~ 88). In the 1950s, after recovering from serious illness, Scelsi moved to a neighborhood in Rome near the ancient ruins of Foro Romano and began composing again primarily works for solo instruments. During this period, the year 1956 in which this piece was composed can be called his brass (horn) year, during which he also composed solo pieces for horn and trombone. In this piece we already find Scelsi using quarter tone, a device that he would become increasingly interested in later on. Unlike the first piece with its succession of numerous central notes, the last three pieces in this composition consist of peripheral notes distributed around one central note, reminicent of Scelsi's earlier concentration on the various tonal fragments existing potentially within one note or their modulations. In particular, the fourth piece relies on only five pitch classes, including F, E, Eb (= D#) and the quarter tones above and below F. (But with F appearing in two compasses.) Here, the central note is F, and the compositional method which employs the quarter tones above and below it is one that the composer continued to use later on. This method, in which what appears to be one simple note is in fact a complex quest in search of its inner essence, has also been critiqued in terms of its relation to Hindu philosophy. It is a known fact that Scelsi sometimes employed others to transcribe his improvisational performances into scores, and this piece is certainly one that is based on a very improvisational concept.
Fanfanfarren 9 comes next and is followed by the piece
Ryoanji (1983) by John Cage ((1912 ~ 92). For his recital
in 1994, Sokabe arranged Cage's oboe version of this piece as
a duet for his Zephyros trumpet and percussion. What the score
provides is a percussion pulse that plays the
role of the white sand covering the ground of the Ryoanji temple's
rockgarden--here a pre-recorded tape is used for the percussion
part--and many curved lines taken from sections of the outlines
of the 15 rocks of various sizes that make up the garden arrangement.
The performance of these curved lines in glissando makes good
use of the unique quality of the Zephyros trumpet. At times there
are variations in the scale of the longitudinal axes that indicate
the tonal range. In this way the shapes of the rocks are transformed
into a graphic score. In some sense this is representational(descriptive??),
but it is fundamentally different from what is generally considered
representational music, in which something like a landscape is
perceived emotionally and that impression expressed by means of
sentimental elements. It should be noted that contrary to the
generally accepted determinist interpretations offered by art
critics and philosophers concerning the placement of the rocks
in the Ryoanji garden, Cage says he got the impression that the
rocks could have been placed in any positions.
He also went on to say, in the book Pour les oiseaux co-authored
with Daniel Charles, that when you allow things the freedom to
appear in their own form,one's consciousness of harmony becomes
even stronger.
After Fanfanfarren 11 comes
Cloud, The Grave Stone in the Sky (1996) by Rika Narimoto
(1969). This is a composition selected for the 1998 Trumpet Festa
sponsored by the Japan Society for Contemporary Music and the
Japan Trumpet Society, and in this festival Sokabe gave the premiere
performance. In addition to the usual image of the trumpet as
an instrument of strength and brilliance, the composer has been
attracted to its capability for delicate nuance and its character
as an instrument that can sing. The title of the piece came from
one moment's experience while composing in a hotel room in Kyoto,
when a cloud outside the window suddenly appeared to her as the
gravestone of a friend who had died in a mountaineering accident.
But, Narimoto says it has nothing to do with the musical content
of the piece.
Skillful use of the mute creates a kind of virtual sense of perspective
that gives an effect like a duet. Although the frequent and swift
application of the mute certainly demands an exceptional amount
of practice to master, at the same time one can imagine that its
mastery, once achieve, provides a rare sort of pleasure for the
performer. Meanwhile, the listener is likely
to experience a rather Japanese type of lyricism from this piece.
The composer, Narimoto, graduated magna cum laude from the Music
Department of the Aichi Prefectural University of Fine Arts and
Music with a major in composition and went on to complete the
graduate course in composition at the same university. She continues
to work actively as a composer and has won awards including the
Kuwabara Prize.
After Fanfanfarren 7 we hear
the work Old/New (1986) by the same composer, Kagel. It
bears the subtitle Studie fur Solotrompete. This short
piece proceeds with forte motifs being mimicked in pianissimo
and vice versa. There are motifs employing mainly third intervals
and others
employing chromatic motion. The piece traces its inspirational
source back to the black music of Harlem in the 1930s, with the
title indicating the old(rhythm) and new (blues) styles of the
day. The score is written in the key of C but contains a note
saying that it can also be performed with instruments of other
keys like a Bb trumpet. Later, this piece was included under the
title R: Old/New (for solo clarinet) as the 4th of "Five
Jazz Pieces" the suite Rrrrrrr... consisting of 41 pieces
in all.
The last piece of the CD is Fanfanfarren 1.
By Yoriaki Matsudaira(composer)
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Performer's
Comment
Although the performer, the composer and the musicologist can all be called musician's a broad sense of the word, what they actually do is quite different. As the structure of music has become more complex, the effort necessary to acquire the respective techniques and knowledge involved has led to clear division of these disciplines. My job as a performer is to search for the intent of the composer in the score and translate it into actual sound. My long-time friend, the composer Jo Kondo, wrote a comment about my performance for my last CD that describes what, I am somewhat embarrassed to say, constitutes an ideal that I am still striving to achieve. And, for the programme of my recent solo recital at an art museum I wrote, my act of performing is the act of creating new meaning in music.
Assembling the program for a concert
or CD is also a creative act. And this is another case where the
creative act of the composer and the performer certainly become
quite different.
I will cut short the irrelevant ramblings of a performer here
(for all should be said by the music itself), and simply say that
I will be very pleased if you will listen to the performances
here as you might enjoy the flavors of seasonal cuisine.
Evolution of the Zephyros
With numerous improvements, the Zephyros
trumpet that was used exclusively for performances of compositions
by Toshio Nakagawa on the solo CD "Till Now and From Now
On" was undergone further evolutions. Designating the trumpet
used on the last CD the Zephyros II, two new instruments designated
the Zephyros III and Zephyros IV have been completed.
Although it represents a reversal in order, the Zephyros IV was
completed first and the Zephyros III completed later with subsequent
improvements on the Zephyros IV.
The Zephyros IV is used on Ryoan-ji (John Cage), eco lontanissima
V(Yoshifumi Tanaka) and Fanfanfarren (Mauricio Kargel), while
the Zephyros III was used on Fanfanfarren (Mauricio Kagel).
The main points of improvement include the following:
1. The bell portion was elongated to produce a bell of normal
size and a tonal quality that is no different from a conventional
trumpet.
2. A special attachment has been added (allowing the trumpet to
be rested on the shoulder) that allows the playerfs right hand
to be taken of the piston assembly, thus enabling the attachment
or removal or opening and closing ofthe mute while operating the
slide.
Specifications
The key of the horn itself is C. There are three pistons (same
as a conventional trumpet and one slide which can lower the sound
by up to an augmented fourth when the pistons are not depressed.
By using the slide along with the pistons it is possible to achieve
a much freer glissando than on a trombone. Also, by using them
in combination it is possible to get subtle nuances between the
musical intervals and other special tonal effects.
The Zephyros III has basically the same specification but is in the key of B-flat.
The Zephyros IV instrument was constructed by the Best Brass company and the Zephyros III was constructed by Grobal. We would like to take this opportunity to thank these companies for the tremendous efforts and support they extended us in the production of the instruments. In particular we would like to acknowledge the technical expertise of the Mr. Hamanaga of Best Brass and Mr. Haido of Grobal who did the actual construction of the instruments and extend to them our heartfelt thanks.
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