The Nambu Railway, which later became the Nambu Line, started its operation on March 9, 1927.
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Keikyū Kawasaki Station, operated by the Keihin Electric Express Railway is located to the northeast.
Category:Tōkaidō Main Line Category:Keihin-Tōhoku Line Category:Nambu Line Category:Stations of East Japan Railway Company Category:Railway stations in Kanagawa Prefecture Category:Railway stations opened in 1872 Category:Kawasaki, Kanagawa
de:Bahnhof Kawasaki fa:ایستگاه کاواساکی ko:가와사키 역 ja:川崎駅 ru:Кавасаки (станция) simple:Kawasaki Station th:สถานีคาวาซากิ zh:川崎站This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Ryo Kawasaki |
---|---|
Background | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Birth name | 川崎燎 |
Born | February 25, 1947Kōenji, Tokyo |
Instrument | guitars, keyboards |
Genre | Jazz fusion |
Occupation | Guitarist, Composer, Audio Engineer, Software Programmer |
Years active | 1967 - |
Website | http://www.ryokawasaki.com/ |
Past members | }} |
Ryo Kawasaki (川崎燎, Kawasaki Ryo) (born February 25, 1947) chose a career as a jazz fusion guitarist after spending some years studying as a scientist. During the 60s he played with various Japanese jazz groups and also formed his own bands. In the early 70s he came to New York where he settled and found steady work in very distinguished company, including the bands of Gil Evans, Elvin Jones, Chico Hamilton, Ted Curson and Joanne Brackeen. In the mid-80s, Kawasaki drifted out of performing music in favour of writing music software programmes for computers. He also produced several techno dance singles, forming his own company, Satellites Records, for their release.
In 1991 he returned to jazz and proved to be as skilled and adept as ever on albums recorded for a Japanese label but marketed in the United States by his own company. Thanks to his long and wide experience, Kawasaki is able to switch with apparent ease between hard bop and jazz-rock. His playing is notable for its fluency and a sometimes hard-hitting style.
Kawasaki's entire life has been marked by his innate inquisitiveness and powers of invention, both in music and science. While his mother encouraged him to take piano and ballet lessons, he has decided taking voice lessons and solfege at age four and violin lessons at five, and was reading music before elementary school. As a grade scholar, he began a lifelong fascination with astronomy and electronics (he built his own radios, TVs and audio systems including amplifiers and speakers as well as telescopes). When Ryo was 10-years-old, he bought a ukulele and, at 14, he got his first acoustic guitar. The album Midnight Blue by Kenny Burrell and Stanley Turrentine inspired Ryo to study jazz.
In high school he began hanging out at coffee-houses that featured live music, formed a jazz ensemble and built an electric organ that served as a primitive synthesizer. By the time he was 16, his band was playing professionally in cabarets and strip joints. Although he continued to play music regularly, he attended Nippon University, majored in quantum physics and earned his Bachelor of Science Degree. Although he has failed to prove his main interest and intuitive belief at that time, which is to prove that speed (acceleration) of gravity must be much greater than speed of light. He also did some teaching and contest judging at the Yamaha musical instrument manufacturer's jazz school. Additionally he worked as a sound engineer for Japanese Victor Records and BGM/TBS Music where he learned mixing and editing.
He also has recorded and worked with notable Japanese Jazz legends such as drummer Takeshi Inomata and Sound limits, saxophonist Jiro Inagaki and Soul Mates, saxophonist Keiichiro Ebisawa, saxophonist Seiichi Nakamura, pianist Masahiko Sato (佐藤允彦), saxophonist Hidehiko Matsumoto (松本英彦) and many others.
Kawasaki followed in the footsteps of Jim Hall, Gábor Szabó and Larry Coryell by becoming the guitarist in the Chico Hamilton Band, playing on a U.S. tour and working on various film scores that Chico recorded in Hollywood. Ryo made his debut U.S. album, Juice, in 1976 for RCA and was one of the first Japanese jazz artists to sign with a major label in the States. Sidemen on the project included Tom Coster (Carlos Santana) and Sam Morrison (Miles Davis). Kawasaki followed that recording with two more albums, ''Prism'' and ''Eight Mile Road'', for the Japanese label East Wind. He also joined the Elvin Jones Band for a year-long tour of North and South America and Europe. By 1978, Kawasaki was tired of touring with other bands and returned to his own projects.
He explored Music of India, learned ragas and recorded an Audio Fidelity album, Ring Toss, that combined eastern and western music. With Dave Liebman he recorded Nature's Revenge for the German MPS label and they toured Europe. Ryo also toured European jazz festivals with Joanne Brackeen as piano – guitar duo, and they recorded a pair of albums—AFT and Trinkets and Things—for Timeless Records in Holland. In Japan, Sony's Open Sky label signed Ryo for three albums—Mirror of my Mind, Little Tree and Live—the latter, recorded in a Tokyo club, was one of the first all-digital recordings. Notable musicians participated on those recordings are : Michael Brecker, Harvey Mason, Leon Pendarvis, Azar Lawrence, Anthony Jackson, Lincoln Goines, Badal Roy, Nana Vasconcelos, Buddy Williams, Larry Willis and Alex Blake to name a few. He also recorded an album called ''Sapporo'' for Swiss label America Sound in 1980 while touring Switzerland and Germany.
When the Commodore 64 computer came out with a sound-chip in it, Kawasaki became fascinated by the possibilities. He learned to write computer programs and devoted 16-hours-a-day for two years creating four music software programs—''Kawasaki Synthesizer'', ''Kawasaki Rhythm Rocker'', ''Kawasaki Magical Musicquill'', and ''Kawasaki MIDI Workstation''—distributed by Sight and Sound Music. The first three programs were for school and home use, and the last one was for professional studios. He created an all-synthesized album, Images, in 1987; and the soundtrack, Pleasure Garden, in 1990 for an IMAX film about the preservation of the Earth's endangered tropical rain forests.
From 1986 to 1990, Kawasaki produced a series of high-charting 12 inch dance singles—"Electric World", "One Kiss", "No Expectations", "Say Baby I Love You", "Don't Tell Me", "Wildest Dreams", "Life is The Rhythm", "Pleasure Garden" and "Acid Heat"—that mixed free-style, house, acid house and ambient sounds. All of the production was done at his home studio, The Satellite Station, and the records were released on his own label, Satellites Records. His band and a dance troupe also performed extensively in New York dance clubs. In addition, for five years (1988 to 1993), Kawasaki was the New York producer and director of two Japanese national weekly music radio programs, "The Music Now" and "Idex Music Jam." In 1991. He also collaborated with Japanese koto master Kicho Takano and produced "Crystallization" in 1986.
His another recent release "Cosmic Rhythm" in 1999 features British singer lyrisist Clare Foster along with Ryo's current rhythm section Victor Jones on Drums, Lincoln Goines on Bass. The album also features David Kikoski on Piano and Shunzo Ohno on Flugel Horn. All the songs were arranged and recorded by Ryo Kawasaki including original ten songs by Ryo himself.
During 1995–1999, three noteworthy hip hop Super Stars Puff Daddy, Kool G Rap and Keith Murray have recorded Ryo's original composition "Bamboo Child" on their latest albums more than twenty years later from its original recording, proving that even Ryo's old recording would perfectly match with current Hip-Hop beats and moods.
His other projects include being a composer, music director as well as guitarist for the jazz ballet "Still Point" for Estonian National Opera House during 2000 -2002. This ballet is choreographed by Russell Adamson, a native Jamaican who resides in Helsinki. Ryo also released his third acoustic guitar solo album 'E' in 2002. From year 2000, Kawasaki has further expanded his live appearances into Russia and Baltic region Jazz Festivals. His quartet has appeared at Rigas Ritmi Jazz Festival in Riga/Latvia, Pori and other jazz festivals in Finland, Ukraine, Lithuania as well as Саранск (Saransk) Jazz Ark Festival, Saransk is a Capital of Mordovia Republic located 630 km east from Moscow. He also appeared numerous times at Nõmme Jazz Festival in Estonia while assisting the production of this jazz festival.
Kawasaki's most recent projects during 2005–2008 include guitar trio project with American drummer Brian Melvin and Estonian bassist Toivo Unt under the name "Art of Trio" performing in variety of venues in Finland, Sweden and Baltic states, and performing with Estonian vocalist Jaanika Ventsel, while touring and recording in Japan for the duo project with bassist Yoshio 'Chin' Suzuki (鈴木良雄), their new duo CD "Agana" was released in February 2007. In 2008, Ryo has formed jazz ensemble with Estonian pianist/keybordist Tõnu Naissoo. Also his 2nd duo CD with Yoshio 'Chin' Suzuki (鈴木良雄) and first CD with "Art of Trio" are completed and ready to be released during 2009 while his composition "Raisins" was included on the Grand Theft Auto IV radio station Fusion FM in 2008.
Category:Japanese jazz guitarists Category:Jazz fusion guitarists Category:Jazz composers Category:Computer programmers Category:1947 births Category:Living people
cs:Ryo Kawasaki de:Ryō Kawasaki et:Ryō Kawasaki es:Ryō Kawasaki eo:Kawasaki Ryo fr:Ryō Kawasaki ja:川崎燎 ru:Кавасаки, Рё sv:Ryo KawasakiThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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