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Yoshimasa "Yoshi" Wada (11 November 1943 – 18 May 2021) was a Japanese sound art installation artist and new music musician who lived in New York City and then San Francisco, California.[2]

Yoshimasa Wada
Born(1943-11-11)11 November 1943[1]
Kyoto, Japan
Died18 May 2021(2021-05-18) (aged 77)[1]
New York City,[1] New York, U.S.

Life


Born in Japan, after moving to New York City Wada joined the Fluxus movement in 1968 after meeting George Maciunas. Wada then studied music with La Monte Young and the North Indian vocalist Pandit Pran Nath. His works often incorporated the use of drone and were usually performed at a very high volume that allowed for the overtones within the sound to be heard clearly.

Wada frequently performed his own compositions, which featured a certain freedom of improvisation, on Scottish highland bagpipe and with his voice.[3] He also employed a number of homemade instruments,[4] including "pipe horns" (very long horn-type instruments made from metal plumbing piping) that he performed, for example, in the Public Arts International/Free Speech series in 1979,[5] as well as large reed instruments involving multiple bagpipe-like pipes connected to a large air compressor. Due to their appearance, Wada named these reef instruments the Alligator and the Elephantine Crocodile.

Wada was also known for his mechanical and robotic installations. In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in the mid-1990s, he performed a whimsically entitled piece, Lament for the Rise and Fall of Handy-Horn, in which several compressed-air "auditory flare" signals used for nautical emergencies (the "Handy Horn" brand named in the title) were sounded for the duration of their usefulness, giving rise to an alarmingly high-decibel air-pressure environment and charged psychoacoustic environment.


Discography



References


  1. Robin, William (2021-06-05). "Yoshi Wada, Inventive Creator of Sound Worlds, Dies at 77". The New York Times.
  2. "Lem2004-english". Archived from the original on April 15, 2006. Retrieved April 30, 2006.
  3. Bath, Tristan (August 21, 2019). "Pipe Down: Tashi Wada Interviewed". The Quietus. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  4. Eede, Christian (May 20, 2021). "Yoshi Wada Has Died, Aged 77". The Quietus. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  5. Public Arts International/Free Speech catalogue at Princeton University Library

Sources







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