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Natsuki Tamura

Japanese trumpeter and composer NATSUKI TAMURA is internationally recognized for a unique musical vocabulary that blends extended techniques with jazz lyricism. This unpredictable virtuoso’s seemingly limitless creativity led François Couture in All Music Guide to declare that “… we can officially say there are two Natsuki Tamuras: The one playing angular jazz-rock or ferocious free improv… and the one writing simple melodies of stunning beauty… How the two of them live in the same body and breathe through the same trumpet might remain a mystery.”

Born on July 26, 1951, in Otsu, Shiga, Japan, Tamura first picked up the trumpet while performing in his junior high brass band. He began his professional music career after he graduated from high school, playing in numerous bands including the World Sharps Orchestra, Consolation, Skyliners Orchestra, New Herd Orchestra, Music Magic Orchestra, and the Satoko Fujii Ensemble, as well as in his own ensemble. He was the trumpeter for numerous national television shows in Japan from 1973–1982, including The Best Ten, Music Fair, Kirameku Rhythm and many others.

In 1986, he came to the United States to study at Berklee College of Music. He then returned to his native Japan to perform and teach at the Yamaha Popular Music School and at private trumpet studios in Tokyo and Saitama, before coming back to the US to study at New England Conservatory. He made his debut recording as a leader in 1992 on Tobifudo.

In 1997 he released the duo album How Many? with pianist Satoko Fujii, who is also his wife. It marked the beginning of an artistic collaboration that continues up to the present. The duo has made a total of five CDs over the years, including 2012’s Muku. “Muku contains some truly stunning, spine-tingling music…its sheer beauty and elegance is what lingers most,” wrote Dave Wayne in All About Jazz. “Fujii’s orchestral technique, clear chromatic lines and “prepared piano” devices contrast effectively with Tamura’s arsenal of extended techniques which he executes with a warm, vocalized tone throughout the trumpet’s full range,” Ted Panken said in his four-star DownBeat review. Tamura’s collaborations with Fujii reveal an intense musical empathy, and have garnered wide popular and critical acclaim. Jim Santella in All About Jazz described their synergy well in his glowing review of the couple’s 2006 Not Two disc, In Krakow, In November: “… the creative couple forcefully demonstrates what can happen when you let your musical ideas run free… Similarly, Tamura’s mournful trumpet can fly high or low in search of his next surprise. Oftentimes, they both issue plaintive moans that sing like angels on high.” Their sixth duet album is due out in 2017.

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Album Review

Natsuki Tamura / Satoko Fujii: Ki

Read "Ki" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


The sound of Ki is deeply steeped in deliberation, dignity and old-world stateliness. This, coming from the long-term team of trumpeter Natsuki Tamura and pianist Satoko Fujii, might surprise those who have followed the duo's trajectory over its quarter-century-plus existence. Fujii and Tamura stir up musical pots and pans in a startling array of styles. Most of the dishes they cook up are avant-garde--Fujii's boisterous big band stews, Tamura's truculent treks spiced with electricity and/or extended trumpet technique tom foolery ...

6
Album Review

Natsuki Tamura / Satoko Fujii / Ramon Lopez: Yama Kawa Umi

Read "Yama Kawa Umi" reviewed by John Sharpe


Encounters with Japanese pianist Satoko Fujii arrive with mindboggling regularity, yet her output remains remarkably immune to routine. Yama Kawa Umi reunites her with trumpeter (and husband) Natsuki Tamura and Paris-domiciled Spanish drummer Ramon Lopez, resuming the volatile chemistry first heard on Mantle (NotTwo, 2020). Across eight compositions--five by Fujii, three by Tamura--and a brief collective, the trio sculpts improvisations within shifting frameworks, where precision can erupt from apparent disorder and dissolve just as suddenly. Despite the sparse ...

Album Review

Kaze & Koichi Makigami: Shishiodoshi

Read "Shishiodoshi" reviewed by Alberto Bazzurro


Avanguardia piuttosto spinta, attraversata da un marcato gusto per l'antigrazioso di boccioniana memoria, specie in Natsuki Tamura, da sempre braccio armato del quartetto Kaze, da lui codiretto ormai da quasi un quindicennio con la moglie Satoko Fujii, e nell'ospite del succitato quartetto, Koichi Makigami (anche allo scacciapensieri, non accreditato), soprattutto allorché impegnato alla voce (a volte nella sua declinazione di canto armonico): ecco cosa ci offre questo ennesimo album della premiata ditta di cui sopra (i coniugi, intendiamo), ormai da ...

Album Review

Satoko Fujii Quartet: Dog Days Of Summer

Read "Dog Days Of Summer" reviewed by Vincenzo Roggero


Satoko Fujii e il suo quartetto non hanno certo bisogno di presentazione. Presenza imprescindibile negli ultimi quarant'anni di musica creativa, ma si potrebbe dire di musica tout court, musicista dalla produzione discografica inesauribile--ha pubblicato come leader o co-leader più di cento dischi --la pianista, compositrice, band leader giapponese ripropone il format del quartetto che nel 2001, pubblicando Vulcan, aveva inaugurato il nuovo millennio con la forza d'urto di un ciclone. Diciotto anni dopo Bacchus--la loro ultima registrazione risalente al 2007--lo ...

Album Review

Natsuki Tamura, Satoko Fujii, Ramon Lopez: Yama Kawa Umi

Read "Yama Kawa Umi" reviewed by Alberto Bazzurro


Il batterista franco-spagnolo Ramon Lopez, uno dei più personali della scena avant, specificatamente in quel suo approccio che definiremmo “tellurico" all'elemento percussivo, senza per questo mai esondare, si inserisce--si innesta, meglio ancora--su un duo d'arte e di vita largamente collaudato come quello formato da Satoko Fujii e Natsuki Tamura, generando un dialogo a tre voci decisamente sui generis, per la libertà che lo informa, a partire dal modo in cui vengono ribaltate le usuali gerarchie esistenti fra i tre strumenti ...

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Album Review

Keiji Haino / Natsuki Tamura: What Happened There?

Read "What Happened There?" reviewed by Mark Corroto


Unexpected one-off collaborations in creative music have often thrilled and captivated listeners, yielding results as unpredictable as they are unforgettable. Consider Embraced (Pablo Live, 1978) by Cecil Taylor and Mary Lou Williams, the genre-spanning brilliance of Duke Ellington & John Coltrane (Impulse!, 1963), or the boundary-pushing sonic landscapes of My Life in the Bush of Ghosts by Brian Eno and David Byrne. The avant-garde met turntablism in Guitar, Drums 'n' Bass (Avant, 1996), an experimental collision between Derek Bailey and ...

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Album Review

Natsuki Tamura / Satoko Fujii / Ramon Lopez: Yama Kawa Umi

Read "Yama Kawa Umi" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


In a nearly thirty-year career, Satoko Fujii (pianist, bandleader, composer, provocateur, sonic experimenter in the first degree) has shown herself to be one of the most daring and uncompromising artists in music. In a way, she is like Thelonious Monk in that--upon an initial experience with Monk's music (and Fujii's)--the uninitiated may not know quite what to make of what they are hearing, because neither of these artists follows a rule book. They were/are themselves. Best advice to those unfamiliar: ...

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Recording

Trumpeter Natsuki Tamura Moves from One Musical Extreme to Another on Two New Releases out March 23 on Libra

Trumpeter Natsuki Tamura Moves from One Musical Extreme to Another on Two New Releases out March 23 on Libra

Source: Braithwaite & Katz Communications

Tamura debuts new First Meeting group and produces fourth Gato Libre album. “Tamura develops his solos with smears and slurred phrases that lead up to eruptive outbursts on his horn.... he takes his instrument to precarious heights and to burrowing depths."-- Frank Rubolino, CadenceTrumpeter Natsuki Tamura swings from the most hard-edged abstraction to the most touching lyricism on his two latest releases. On Cut the Rope (Libra) with First Meeting -- Tamura, pianist Satoko Fujii, guitarist Kelly ...

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Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

What Happened There?

Libra Records
2025

buy

Message

Libra Records
2025

buy

Shishiodoshi

Libra Records
2025

buy

Ki

Libra Records
2025

buy

Unwritten

Libra Records
2024

buy

NatJim

Libra Records
2024

buy

Inspiration 2

From: Shishiodoshi
By Natsuki Tamura

Never Mind

From: Message
By Natsuki Tamura

What Happened There, Part 1

From: What Happened There?
By Natsuki Tamura

Not Together

From: Dog Days Of Summer
By Natsuki Tamura

Migration

From: Aloft
By Natsuki Tamura

Morning City

From: NatJim
By Natsuki Tamura

One Hundred Dreams Part 1

From: Hyaku: One Hundred Dreams
By Natsuki Tamura

Summer Color

From: Summer Tree
By Natsuki Tamura

Habana's Dream

From: Mosaic
By Natsuki Tamura

Sekirei

From: Koki Solo
By Natsuki Tamura

Prickly Pear Cactus

From: Prickly Pear Cactus
By Natsuki Tamura

Kaineko

From: Koneko
By Natsuki Tamura

Entity

From: Entity
By Natsuki Tamura

Painted By Moonlight

From: Four
By Natsuki Tamura

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