Michihiro Sato: Difference between revisions
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===With John Zorn=== |
===With John Zorn=== |
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*''Ganryu Island'' (Yukon; rereleased by Tzadik) |
*1984 - ''Ganryu Island'' (Yukon; rereleased by Tzadik in 1998) |
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==Films== |
==Films== |
Revision as of 06:56, 17 March 2008
- For the synthesizer player, see Michiro Sato.
Michihiro Sato (佐藤通弘, Satō Michihiro; surname Sato; name sometimes listed as Sato Michihiro; b. Machida, Tokyo, Japan, 1957) is a prominent Japanese player of the Tsugaru-jamisen.
His mother was a traditional dancer and musician. He began intensive study of the Tsugaru-jamisen in 1970, at the age of 13, at a time when few young people were interested in this instrument; indeed, most of the other students were elderly. When he was a junior in college he moved to Hirosaki, Aomori to become an apprentice to master musician Chisato Yamada. In 1982 and 1983 he won first prize in the national Tsugaru-jamisen competition, becoming the first performer to win in two consecutive years. He eventually left his sensei to pursue his interest in free improvised music.
In 1986 Sato was awarded a Rockefeller Foundation grant, with which he pursued collaborations with musicians in New York. Since the mid-1980s he has recorded with John Zorn, Bill Frisell, Fred Frith, Tenko, Mark Miller, Nicolas Collins, Christian Marclay, Steve Coleman, Toh Ban Djan (Ikue Mori and Luli Shioi), Semantics (Elliott Sharp, Samm Bennett, and Ned Rothenberg), Tom Cora, Joey Baron, Mark Dresser, and Gerry Hemingway.
He is married to the koto player Sachiko Kaiho. His son, Michiyoshi Sato, also plays the Tsugaru-jamisen.
Discography
As leader
- 1989 - Rodan (Hat Hut)
- Works Of (PSF)
- On a Cold, Cold Night (PSF)
With John Zorn
- 1984 - Ganryu Island (Yukon; rereleased by Tzadik in 1998)
Films
- 2006 - The World of Michihiro Sato. Produced by Kyoto Broadcasting System.