Momo Kodama’s first ECM New Series album is a marvel, a mesmerizing journey from
the shimmering surfaces of Miroirs, Maurice Ravel’s piano cycle of
1904-45 to Olivier Messiaen’s Fauvette des jardins (written in 1970), a
late masterpiece of piano music from the visionary composer. Kodama’s insights
into Messiaen’s sound-world enable her to convey his religious feeling for
nature, for birdsong transfigured, through the compelling, insistent piano
figures, into spiritual utterance. Linking Ravel’s valley of the bells and
Messiaen’s open sound field is Toru Takemitsu’s Rain Tree Sketch (1982),
music from the East informed by Western experiment, a Japanese reflection on
French music. “Its opening bars” writes Hans-Klaus Jungheinrich in the liner
notes, “evoke not only the rapturous crystalline chord progressions of Messiaen,
but also the flashing, glittering sophistication of Ravel.”
Kodama has a
personal perspective on dialogues of Orient and Occident. Born in Osaka, she
spent her early childhood in Germany, moving to France at 13 to become the
youngest student ever accepted at the Conservatoire national supérieur de
musique in Paris. Later there were studies with great pianists including Murray
Perahia, András Schiff, Vera Gornostaeva and Tatiana Nikolaïeva. At 19 Momo
Kodama was the Munich International Competition’s youngest prize
winner.
She has gone on to play with leading orchestra of Japan, Europe
and the US and worked with conductors including Seiji Ozawa, Kent Nagano, Roger
Norrington, Charles Dutoit, Eliahu Inbal, Valery Gergiev and Lawrence Foster.
Her chamber music partners include Steven Isserlis, Rohan de Saram, Renaud
Capucon, Augustin Dumay and Jörg Widmann. Momo and sister Mari Kodama,
meanwhile, form a piano duo that plays the core repertoire and premieres new
works.
Momo Kodama’s recital repertoire reaches from Bach to the
avant-garde. A major part of her performance schedule is dedicated to
contemporary music, and Messiaen has been a special focus. In 2002, on the 10th
anniversary of Messiaen's death, she performed his Turangalîla Symphony, Les
Visions de l'Amen with her sister Mari, and Les vingt regards sur
l'enfant-Jésus in a series of highly successful concerts. In the Messiaen
centenary year 2008 she received awards in Japan for a concert series dedicated
to the composer. At the Festival La Roque d'Antheréon 2006, at the urging of
Yvonne Loriod-Messiaen, she premiered, with Isabelle Faust, Messiaen's
Fantasie for violin and piano, a piece written in 1933 but never
previously performed. Her recordings of the Vingt regards sur
l’enfant-Jésus and the Catalogue d’Oiseaux for Triton, received high
critical acclaim. In 2008 she commissioned Toshio Hosokawa’s Stunden
Blumen, a work with the same instrumentation as Messiaen’s Quatuor pour
la fin du temps, and performed both pieces at festivals in Lucerne, Paris,
Hamburg and Vienna.
A number of composers have written works for Kodama.
She is also the dedicatee of works including Lichtstudie 3 by Jörg
Widmann, which she premiered at the Lucerne Festival, and Echo by Ichiro
Nodaira, which was composed for Momo and Mari Kodama.
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