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[Akira Miyoshi’s Piano Works] A curated selection of gem-like pieces by a master of contemporary Japanese music

[Akira Miyoshi’s Piano Works] A curated selection of gem-like pieces by a master of contemporary Japanese music
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Akira Miyoshi, born in 1933 and sadly passed away in 2013, was a composer who represented contemporary Japan.

Miyoshi had an unusual background: he entered the Department of French Literature in the Faculty of Letters at the University of Tokyo, and while still a student studied at the Paris Conservatoire, honing his craft.

He is also known for leaving behind many choral works in which his innate musical talent and literary sensibility were fully realized.

In this article, we will focus on his works written for piano, introducing them along with the background of their composition and their distinctive features.

[Akira Miyoshi’s Piano Works] A curated selection of gems by a master of contemporary Japanese music (1–10)

Piano SonataMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi: Piano Sonata (Sonate pour piano) 三善晃:ピアノソナタ
Piano SonataMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is a composer who represents contemporary Japanese music.

He entered the French Literature Department of the University of Tokyo, then studied at the Paris Conservatoire, where his talent as a composer blossomed.

Among his solo piano works, the Piano Sonata, composed in 1958, is a significant piece.

A large-scale work in three movements, it is grounded in the traditional forms of Western music while interweaving elements of Japanese traditional music and nature, unfolding Miyoshi’s distinctive musical language and harmonic idiom.

The work brims with the composer’s spirit of inquiry and creativity.

Why not surrender yourself to the piano’s profound resonance? It promises an experience that brings you into contact with the very essence of music.

Etude in Sonata FormMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi: Etude in the Form of a Sonata I
Etude in Sonata FormMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is one of the composers who best represent contemporary Japan.

With an unconventional background—having studied French literature at the University of Tokyo and later honing his craft at the Paris Conservatory—he established a distinctive musical style that seeks to fuse Western music with Japanese traditional music.

Étude in Sonata Form is an étude he composed specifically for piano.

Published in 1967, it employs the classical sonata form while brimming with the allure of his uniquely meticulous motivic development and richly colored sonorities.

Grounded in profound musical knowledge, working on this étude offers the genuine joy of engaging with a modern masterpiece.

It is a work that every student of the piano is encouraged to play.

Piano Four-Hands Suite “Sound Notebook,” No. 1: PreludeMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi: Piano Duet Suite “A Sound Notebook” 1. Prelude pf. Nanako Sugiura pf. Misato Ishibashi
Piano Four-Hands Suite “Sound Notebook,” No. 1: PreludeMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is one of Japan’s foremost composers.

With an unusual background—entering the Department of French Literature at the University of Tokyo and, while still a student, studying at the Paris Conservatoire to further hone his craft—he went on to leave behind a great many masterpieces.

Among them, the piano four-hands suite “Oto no Techō” (Sound Notebook) is a work that condenses Miyoshi’s musical world, renowned for its delicate and deeply expressive style.

The first piece, “Prelude,” is especially striking for its beautiful melody, brimming with expectation and hope, as if heralding a new departure in life, set against an open and tranquil atmosphere.

While retaining a classical structure, it fuses free expression, allowing listeners to fully savor a worldview that is quintessentially Miyoshi.

Prelude for Piano ‘Chênes’ (Oaks)Miyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi, who is also deeply committed to music education, created an ambitious work in Prelude “Chêne” for Piano, which links 24 short pieces like a chain into a single cycle.

Its distinctive musical language—colorful harmonies that recall Messiaen’s influence, complex rhythms, and ostinato patterns reminiscent of a basso continuo—is distilled throughout the work.

While the piece demands a high degree of sensitivity and creative ingenuity from the performer, it offers a way to engage with the essence of contemporary music and to cultivate one’s own musicality through performance.

It can be recommended to intermediate to advanced players with an interest in contemporary music.

Un VertMiyoshi Akira

The 9th Akira Miyoshi Piano Competition Prizewinners’ Commemorative Concert / Rika Wakana
Un VertMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is one of the leading composers of contemporary Japan.

After studying at the Paris Conservatory and honing his craft, he returned to Japan and released works across a wide range of genres, including choral music, instrumental pieces, orchestral works, and electronic music.

Among them, the piano piece “Un Verre” is known for brilliantly expressing Miyoshi’s unique worldview, centered on themes such as the “invisible” and the relationship between humans and nature.

Combining delicacy with intensity, this demanding work requires exceptional pianistic technique, yet it is an ambitious piece that offers a direct encounter with Miyoshi’s thought and aesthetics.

It is a highly recommended choice for advanced listeners familiar with contemporary music.

Piano ConcertoMiyoshi Akira

AKIRA MIYOSHI: Piano Concerto (Hiroko Nakamura, soloist)
Piano ConcertoMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi, born in 1933, was a composer who had a profound impact on contemporary Japanese music.

While enrolled in the French literature department at the University of Tokyo, he undertook the unusual step of studying abroad at the Paris Conservatory, where he was deeply influenced by French modern music.

His Piano Concerto is a gem that can be considered one of his signature works.

Incorporating Japanese elements in its harmony and melody while fusing techniques of contemporary music within the framework of classical music, it is Miyoshi’s world on full display.

The profound emotion arising from the interplay between piano and orchestra, and the development that swells from silence with mounting tension, are breathtaking.

Modern yet tinged with a certain nostalgia, it is truly the essence of contemporary Japanese music.

It’s a piece I highly recommend not only to classical music fans but also to anyone interested in Japan’s contemporary music.

Piano Miniatures “Sea Diary,” No. 24: “Broken-Off Sound of the Surf”Miyoshi Akira

C Grade Modern and Contemporary: Akira Miyoshi – The Broken Roar of the Tides (2023 PTNA Competition Required Piece), pf. Nao Mieno
Piano Miniatures “Sea Diary,” No. 24: “Broken-Off Sound of the Surf”Miyoshi Akira

Teoreta Shiosai (The Broken-Off Sound of Waves), included in Akira Miyoshi’s collection Sea Diary, is a delicate and beautifully colored piano miniature by one of modern Japan’s foremost composers.

Although written as teaching material for children, Miyoshi’s exceptional craftsmanship makes it enjoyable for listeners and performers of any age.

Particularly noteworthy are the sections where the tonality shifts rapidly; performers are called upon to change timbre from section to section with an almost improvisatory sense of expression.

This work fully showcases Miyoshi’s refined sensibility—rooted in French music—and its fusion with a characteristically Japanese delicacy.

It is highly recommended not only for children learning the piano, but also for adults looking for a compelling recital piece.

Piano Miniatures “Sea Diary” No. 25: “Visit from the Young Halfbeaks”Miyoshi Akira

[Recommended Piano Recital] A Visit from the Sayori Kids ♫ Akira Miyoshi / Snipe Fishes’ Visit
Piano Miniatures “Sea Diary” No. 25: “Visit from the Young Halfbeaks”Miyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is a composer who represents modern Japan.

With an unusual background that includes entering the University of Tokyo’s Faculty of Letters to study French literature and studying at the Paris Conservatory while enrolled, he fully demonstrated his exceptional musical talent and literary skill, leaving behind many masterpieces, notably in choral music.

His piano miniatures Sea Diary are classified as contemporary works, and the series of pieces themed on the sea and waterside opens up a sound world brimming with originality.

No.

25, The Visit of the Little Halfbeaks, is a charming piece that packs in musical elements such as legato in thirds and richly nuanced expression.

Piano Miniatures “Sea Diary” No. 28: “Arabesque of the Waves”Miyoshi Akira

PTNA 2014 Competition National Finals / D Category Gold Prize: Reima Yonekura — Akira Miyoshi / Arabesque of the Waves
Piano Miniatures “Sea Diary” No. 28: “Arabesque of the Waves”Miyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is a composer who represents modern Japan.

With an unconventional background that includes studying French literature at the University of Tokyo and then going on to the Paris Conservatory, he left behind numerous choral works in which both his musical talent and literary sensibility are fully displayed.

At the same time, his piano works also include a number of outstanding masterpieces.

Wave Arabesque, from his piano miniatures for children The Sea’s Diary, is striking for its arabesque-like figures that evoke waves.

In this beautiful music—where Miyoshi’s distinctly Japanese sensibility merges with the aesthetics he cultivated during his studies in France—both performers and listeners may feel as though they are standing by the seaside.

It is a piece that intermediate to advanced pianists are strongly encouraged to try.

Theme and VariationsMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi: Theme and Variations pf. Nanako Sugiura: Nanako Sugiura
Theme and VariationsMiyoshi Akira

Akira Miyoshi is a composer who represents contemporary Japanese music.

After graduating from the University of Tokyo’s Department of French Literature, he studied at the Paris Conservatory.

Renowned for choral works that fully showcase both his literary gift and musical talent, he also wrote Theme and Variations for piano—a quintessentially Miyoshi piece that employs a wide range of techniques to paint a musical landscape beyond the bounds of the traditional variation form.

Its emotionally rich expression, grounded in meticulous structure, stirs the listener’s imagination and challenges the performer’s sensibilities.

Classical yet somehow new, it allows you to savor a world uniquely his own.