Current:Home > FinanceAs Ryuichi Sakamoto returns with '12,' fellow artists recall his impact -ProfitSphere Academy
As Ryuichi Sakamoto returns with '12,' fellow artists recall his impact
View
Date:2025-04-24 22:47:33
Ryuichi Sakamoto has been an enormously respected artist for decades, starting with his work in the '70s and '80s as a member of Yellow Magic Orchestra in his native Japan to his deeply affective, Grammy and Oscar-winning scores for film and within his numerous avant-electronic solo experimentations. Those experimentations continued most recently with the Jan. 17 release of 12, his latest solo album – created in March 2021, while Sakamoto was undergoing treatment for cancer.
Unfortunately, Sakamoto wasn't able to record an interview about his new release, so we spoke to some of the celebrated artists he's worked with to discuss and explain his impactful career.
To hear the full broadcast version of this story, use the audio player at the top of this page.
Alejandro González Iñárritu, film director
"I vividly recall the emotional experience I had the first time I listened to Ryuichi Sakamoto," explains Alejandro González Iñárritu, lauded director of films like the Best Picture-winning Birdman and The Revenant, for which Sakamoto composed the score. ("I wanted to have somebody who was able to understand silence," Iñárritu explains of his selection, "and that's Ryuichi.")
"I was in a car, stuck in traffic in Mexico City with a friend of mine, and we put a pirate japanese cassette on – this was 1983. I heard some piano notes and I felt as if the fingers were penetrating my brain and giving me a cranial cosmic massage... and it was 'Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence.' "
Carsten Nicolai/Alva Noto, artist
"I can hear so much in these 12 tracks of his current state of him and his kind of sensibility, the fragileness, the weakness," says Nicolai, who has recorded and performed with Sakamoto many times, of his friend's newest album.
"It feels strong and fragile in the same moment. It has this incredible beauty of not being too complex."
Hildur Guðnadóttir, composer
"When did I first come across Sakamoto's music? Ryuichi's music is so timeless, it feels like you've almost always known it. There's such deep listening in the way that he works.
"He invited me to work with him on the soundtrack for The Revenant –it was very interesting to interpret how he was explaining his music, like it wasn't so much with words, but it was with the gestures of his wrists and the movements of his eyelids – he just physically embodied his music."
Flying Lotus, composer and producer
"If you want to talk about his history and what he's done in the past, there's a lot of stuff from Thousand Knives ... that was like some really early stuff," the LA-based, jazz-leaning experimental producer tells All Things Considered of Sakamoto's 1978 synth exploration. "But if you play it up against something today, it still sounds like the future."
"He came to LA to work with me for a little bit ... he had this childlike curiosity about the potential for sounds that we could come up with. He would look around, tap on surfaces ... tinker around with my ceiling fan above us. [Laughs]
"He found the beauty in all the little things."
veryGood! (41)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Bad Bunny's 'SNL' gig sees appearances from Pedro Pascal, Mick Jagger and Lady Gaga
- Biden and Netanyahu agree to continue flow of aid into Gaza, White House says
- Dolphins, explosive offense will be featured on in-season edition of HBO's 'Hard Knocks'
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Saints quarterback Derek Carr's outbursts shows double standard for Black players
- 35 years later, Georgia authorities identify woman whose body was found in a dumpster
- 5 Things podcast: Two American hostages released by Hamas, House in limbo without Speaker
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Bill Belichick finally gets 300th career regular-season win as Patriots upset Bills
Ranking
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- A price cap on Russian oil aims to starve Putin of cash. But it’s largely been untested. Until now
- Andy Reid after Travis Kelce's big day: Taylor Swift 'can stay around all she wants'
- Outcome of key local races in Pennsylvania could offer lessons for 2024 election
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Winter forecast: A warmer North, wetter South because of El Nino, climate change
- A US watchdog says the Taliban are benefiting from international aid through ‘fraudulent’ NGOs
- Trump to seek presidential immunity against E. Jean Carroll's 2019 damage claims
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Writer Salman Rushdie decries attacks on free expression as he accepts German Peace Prize
Teen climbs Mount Kilimanjaro to raise money to fight sister's rare disease
Outcome of key local races in Pennsylvania could offer lessons for 2024 election
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes Are the Real MVPs for Their Chiefs Game Handshake
Autopsies confirm 5 died of chemical exposure in tanker crash
Gov. Whitmer criticizes MSU for ‘scandal after scandal,’ leadership woes