A changing picture: Damon Krukowski on Teiji Ito.
Krukowski, Damon
TEIJI ITO IS INVARIABLY LINKED to Maya Deren, since their
professional and romantic relationship spanned the last decade of her
career, 1952-61, and the first of his. Deren's account of their
initial encounter is as steeped in self-mythology as any of the images
in her films:
"Teiji, I have the feeling that if ever you were approached by an
inquiring reporter and asked for one or two of the most important or
critical moments in your life--you certainly would have to mention
that one where I ran into you in front of the five and dime store."
"When you asked me to do the score for your film."
Ito was only seventeen years old at the time. Born in Japan to a
samurai-class family with long-standing ties to the theater, he had
immigrated with his parents to the United States shortly before Pearl
Harbor. By the time he met Deren, then thirty-five, he had learned to
play a variety of instruments and performed onstage accompanying his
mother, a dancer, with percussion, but he had yet to compose any music.
Nevertheless, as Deren remarked of their first meeting: "I suddenly
stopped in the middle of a sentence. Things went clickety-clack in my
head and I said 'You're the one!'"
Deren's waking-dream logic was impeccable. Ito proceeded to
write the score to her just-completed film, The Very Eye of Night
(released in 1958), playing all the instruments and recording it
himself--a score that Deren found so complementary she asked Ito to add
music to her already classic, and heretofore silent, Meshes of the
Afternoon (1943; music, 1959).
This past summer these two key film scores, together with music Ito
composed for other film projects both underground and industrial, were
released on CD as Music for Maya: Early Film Music of Teiji Ito--the
third volume of Ito's music on John Zorn's Tzadik label, which
has announced plans to continue documenting this underappreciated
composer's work. Together with the two CDs already available--King
Ubu (1961), the score for an off-Broadway production of Alfred
Jarry's play, and Tenno (1964), the score for an unrealized
documentary about the Japanese emperor--Tzadik's series
demonstrates the breadth of Ito's work in the New York performing
arts of the 1950s and '60s. In addition to filmmakers, Ito
collaborated with numerous artists in theater and dance, including
Julian Beck and Judith Malina of the Living Theatre, Jerome Robbins and
the New York City Ballet, even Broadway producer David Merrick (Ito
composed music for the original production of One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest). More than one hundred hours of tapes of his music
are included in an archive at the New York Public Library for the
Performing Arts; nearly all of the music has never been heard outside
its original context.
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Although Ito was the consummate collaborator--he once said (in the
same interview with Deren quoted above, published with the Music for
Maya CD), "The object of working together ... is trying to express
a large principle which is bigger than any personal thing you might
have"--his music was in fact almost always both played and recorded
entirely by himself, with a battery of instruments from around the
world, and a self-operated tape recorder. As accordionist Guy Klucevsek,
who met Ito shortly before the composer's death in 1982, writes in
the liner notes to King Ubu, "For Teiji, there was no such thing as
an 'instrumentalist.' There were only 'musicians,'
and it seemed perfectly natural and sensible to him that a musician
should be able to make music on any and all instruments, and so he
did." For example, the instrumentation for King Ubu consists of
"alto saxophone, clarinet, hichiriki, orkon, nohkan, voices,
whistling, electric chord organ, electric and acoustic guitars, ukelele,
bells, bottles, castanets, cymbals, congas, meringue, o-daiko, other
assorted unidentified drums, maracas, marimbula, mbiras, metal springs,
steel drum, tambourine, temple blocks, vaccines, wood blocks, xylophone,
zither, magnetic tape manipulation."
All are played by Ito, overdubbed to conjure a piebald orchestra
the likes of which no pit has ever housed. The results range from an
Albert Ayler-like overture of sax fanfares accompanied by insistent,
slightly out-of-time percussion, to a rendition of "Beer Barrel
Polka" that sounds like a synchronous accident between disparate
games at a carnival. Equally at home with traditional instruments and
techniques, modern jazz, and what was then called New Music, Ito may
well be the paradigmatic Tzadik composer--his work is the exemplar of
the postvirtuoso, postmodern type of "cut-up," or pastiche,
music that has characterized much of the downtown scene of John
Zorn's generation.
King Ubu and the equally impressive Tenno are works that have never
before been issued as recordings. The surprise of Music for Maya, with
its relatively familiar pieces, is the effect of Ito's scores
without the well-known films they were meant to accompany. Juxtaposed against the ethnographically unconcerned music of King Ubu, for
instance, Ito's Japanese-sounding score for Meshes of the Afternoon
loses the ponderous orientalism that Deren's images reinforce. Was
the young Ito having a go at Noh, in the same way he later hurled
himself into the polka? Indeed, despite its seemingly careful tailoring
to image, Ito's music was intended to have a different, even if
complementary, effect. As he himself explained, "If you were to
listen to the music alone, the [film] image wouldn't be what the
music sounded like."
What this music does sound like is very different from the
Surrealist-influenced, mythological images of Maya Deren. In place of
her symbolism, Ito's vagabond-like treatment of instrument and
genre suggest a highly fractured, multivocal, multivalent world--in
other words, one very much like our own.
DAMON KRUKOWSKI IS A MUSICIAN AND WRITER BASED IN BOSTON.