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SEJSEJSEJSEJSEJSEJ

Sciascia Ensemble Japan Homepage English Version  renewed Jan. 2006 

WE LOVE Maestro Stefano Sciascia !!  

 

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Maestro Stefano Sciascia Homepage

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S.E.J. Event Apr.'05 at Rokkoman Kobe,Japan

# S.E.J.Event Sep.'05 at KR&AC  Kobe, Japan 

# S.E.J.Event Oct.'05 at  Kagurazaka Tokyo,Japan

# S.E.J.Event Apr.'06 at  Nada Kobe,Japan

You'd better to Visit The Biggest Doublebass Pro shop in Tokyo

Yamamoto Instrument Co.Ltd. (as The World TOP Proffessional Cb shop)

NEWS

#   Sciascia Orchestra Japan Established !!
#   Maestro Sciascia's NEW album "G.Bottesini" you can buy from HERE !

#   Maestro Stefano Sciascia Interview from The Double bassist Magazine (UK) Autumn

Maestro Stefano Sciascia's Newest CD "MANTRA 22.22" you can buy from HERE !!

#  Maestro Stefano Sciascia  KINGRECORDS Tokyo's CD  you can check from here (Japanese Only)

Go To Archives of Yoshihiro Utsumi (producer /S.E.J.) 

Message from Maestro Stefano Sciascia

The Message for S.E.J.  

   LONG LIVE S.E.J. !!!  I Love this great Musicians that play with passion and feelings coming directly from their wonderful shining Hearth !  The Magic Light of Music will always sign your steps to reach the top of the Sky .  

Stefano ***Sciascia***

Extract from World Famous Proffessional Magazin " DoubleBassist (UK)" 's  Review  herefollows

Stefano Sciascia's mission is to encourage bassists to look to their soul for inspiration. He opens his own to Maggie Williams titled: "Singing from the soul "  Extracted from opened Web.page by Double BASSIST magazine UK
As anyone who has ever played a solo work will know, there's more to successful interpretation than merely getting the notes and rhythms correct. Emotional involvement and the ability to bring your own character to a performance are equally important, and these are facets that Italian soloist Stefano Sciascia has put at the centre of his own art.
Born in Turin in 1960, Sciascia began playing the double bass relatively late at the age of 16. He progressed quickly to the Italian Youth Orchestra, which gave him plenty of insight into what life as a professional musician might entail. 'We did a European tour, performed at the Edinburgh Festival and saw some beautiful places. I began to understand about orchestral playing, and how it would be to do this as a profession,' he recalls. After completing his studies, Sciascia continued his orchestral career, joining the Turin Radio Symphony Orchestra. He supplemented his section work with Baroque performances on modern instruments through I Solisti Veneti di Claudio Scimone, and played Classical period works with l'Orchestra da Camera di Padova e del Veneto.
While inspired by his orchestral and chamber experiences, Sciascia discovered that these roles only partially fulfilled his musical desires. 'I got to play with many soloists through my orchestral work, and that made me realise there was something inside me that I wanted to express. It's very beautiful to hear an orchestra or a bass section all together, but it's like a choir - you can't hear your own voice.' The young bassist started to work on a more individual means of expression. He studied Bottesini's solo works during breaks in his orchestral schedule, and after a mere two to three months, hired a studio to make 'a simple record' of some of these pieces with the pianist David Giovanni Leonardi - who remains Sciascia's regular accompanist. 'We made a basic recording, and then I decided I wanted someone to publish it. It wasn't a very good tape, though,' he concedes. 'I went to [record companies in] Milan and Turin, but everyone wanted money to produce a CD. Nearer to my home in Venice, I found the producer Robert de Pieri who runs the Rivo Alto publishing company.' De Pieri's passion for Italian music, and his fondness for Bottesini's works, convinced him to take a chance with Sciascia. In 1994, after some reworking in the studio, Opere per contrabbasso e pianoforte appeared, cementing the start of a long-term working relationship with de Pieri which continues to this day. 'Robert is great, a real professional,' Sciascia enthuses.
Sciascia's published repertoire now extends to six recordings on Rivo Alto, but it was the third of these, 1998's Quella fiamma which marked a real turning point for the bassist. Comprising his own transcriptions of operatic arias by 18th century composers including Vivaldi, Handel and Pergolesi, it not only marked the start of Sciascia's passion for creating his own repertoire, but also changed the way he viewed the double bass. 'I began to think about how to make the instrument sing like the human voice,' he explains. 'This was my new inspiration, to try to forget that you're playing the bass and to be free with your mind. Your feelings have to be able to reach the heart of your audience, like a singer does.' Sciascia cites Gary Karr as a big influence in this respect. 'Gary Karr was the first person who I really heard sing with my instrument,' he explains. However, Sciascia concedes that the double bass repertoire doesn't always help players to achieve this lyrical goal. 'Sometimes double bass music is not that beautiful, other instruments - and singers - have more attractive repertoire.' In transcribing arias for the bass, Sciascia also points out that he is in good company. 'Bottesini was a man of the opera. He created music around vocal works, lots of fantasies based on Italian arias.'
The bassist hasn't lost his passion for Bottesini, and ten years after his first solo CD, he intends to record some further works by the Italian composer. 'When I play live, I always include some Bottesini in my recitals,' Sciascia explains. 'Friends have often suggested that I make a CD of some pieces, but every time I've tried to settle down to record them in the past, I've had a new idea and it's got put to one side. Hopefully, now it'll happen.' Sciascia will be visiting the studio in July to record the works, with the CD due for release some time in 2005.
Recording the Bottesini repertoire will mark Sciascia's second session in the studio this year. At the beginning of 2004 he created a CD of his own compositions, taking a radical departure from his previous projects. 'The CD's not really classical music, not ambient, not ethnic - in fact, I'm not sure how to classify it!' he explains. 'Once it was finished, I asked lots of people what they thought, and many said it sounded like a soundtrack, with images of wind, water and suchlike. So, it's a soundtrack, to a year of my life.' Titled Mantra 22:22, the work uses the bass on its own but also with overdubs, multi-tracking and other studio techniques. 'It's all improvised, and completely different from everything else that I've done. I had the ideas when I was teaching, then went to Infinity Studios in Trieste and said to the engineers, "I have to record this music". I worked with Paolo Carrer who has produced all my CDs, and I went ahead, playing it all in one day. I was so hypnotised by the music that I couldn't drive my car afterwards.' Sciascia admits that 'the new CD will be a shock to people who know my other work, but I don't mind that, it's from my soul.' The CD will be available through Stefano Sciascia Production and should be ready to buy at the end of this year via Lemur Music (www.lemurmusic.com).
Encouraging all bassists to play from their soul is Sciascia's mission in his teaching, both with his regular students at the Conservatorio di musica Giuseppe Tartini in Trieste, and in the masterclasses he has given across Italy and abroad. 'The heart is the most important thing,' he asserts. 'You need to learn about fingering, bowing, etcetera, but I like to teach the music. Everyone is different, I don't want to have everyone playing the same as me. You need to be able to move the audience in your own way.' Sciascia admits that this approach was not always at the forefront of his own learning. 'When I was a student, my maestroes told me "it's impossible to teach [musicality], you are either naturally musical or not". But now, I do teach that way, you have to be able to find things inside people. No-one plays the same as I do simply by learning with me - I help them to find their own voice.'
Regardless of whether he is giving a live performance or recording for CD, the importance of bringing his soul into the music remains the same for Sciascia. 'Many people say that it's easy to record, as you can edit afterwards,' he muses. 'But I think everyone should try recording before they say that! Yes, it's easy to cut things, but you could end up being in the studio for a whole month, and that's expensive. In reality, you have two to three days, and you have to be able to leave something of yourself in that CD, it will be there forever. When you record, you have to be in the right mood all the time, it's hard work.' Sciascia's process of recording provides him with some time for reflection before editing begins. 'I like to play a piece three times without stopping, then I go home afterwards and choose the best parts from the recordings, where I hear the emotion is there - that's the most important thing.'
Preparing for a live recital requires a different approach. 'As musicians, you make yourself quiet before playing, you can do meditation, Feldenkrais exercises, anything to become quiet. Then, you go on and you're not quiet! Before a performance, there are a lot of distractions, but the moment you go out onto the stage, you're quiet, the audience is quiet, everyone is silent, and it's like magic. There's something in the air.'
With a schedule of over 15 live recitals this year in Italy, as well as assignments further afield, Sciascia has a lot of magic to create. Over the past years, he has performed twice at the International Society of Bassists' conventions, in 2001 and 2003, gaining a standing ovation for his performance at the latter. Looking ahead, Sciascia has a tour of Japan planned for later in 2004, where the bassist has an enthusiastic following - including an ensemble bearing his name. After hearing the Quella Fiamma CD, Japanese bassist Yoshihiro Utsumi began writing to Sciascia, and went on to form the 22-person Sciascia Ensemble Japan (SEJ) to play around the country and 'make people know [Sciascia's] art'. More exposure in Japan followed, with Susumu Morikawa of Tokyo's King Records selecting two pieces from Quella Fiamma for his compilation CD of double bass solos, King of Bass. King Records also re-released Sciascia's 2002 album Songs of the World in 2003 for a Japanese audience, with the title Contrabasso!. Sciascia has built up a network of friends and colleagues in Japan, including Minoru Kimoto, who he describes as running 'the best bass shop in Tokyo.'
Sciascia sums up his approach to music, saying 'we need more communication between people - it's a mission to make people laugh, cry and feel things. The importance of the music is to make you feel free, and I play to lighten the hearts of other people. I hope I can help everyone else to do these things as well.' Whether listening to his CDs or in a live performance, Sciascia leaves a part of himself in the music, and with his audience.

Issued : Autumn 2004 Version   Published Sep.2004

Extract from DoubleBassist (UK) 's Report

There is no booklet for this CD: you will hear the breath of the Earth of her people in the absolute essence of the melody its way of expression Wordwrites producer Robert de Pieri. Bassist Stefano Sciascia is equally vague Likening Songs of the World to 'an enormous watercolour in which a multitude of colours impress themselves upon the mind leaving it free to wonder.' Why all the obscurity? The disc comprises quite simply an enterprising programme of arrangements of 16 songs of varied national origin. Some countries are more generously represented than others Japan and Israel gaining the most prominence with four each. Yoshihiro 'Utsumi's Aijyou is delightful and I particularly enjoyed the concluding Chiisai-Aki-Mitsuketa but some uncomfortable moments of tonal quality and vibrato width remain in Koujou-no-Tsuki. The block of Israeli songs include Kol Nidrei Nign and Nigun each expressively andstylishly interpreted. The accounts of Spanish Italian Irish Scandinavian and Korean songs are generally spontaneously perceptive in mood and atmosphere. The Italian Era de Magi is given an especially pleasing flexibility and dance like quality but after a delicate start there is a hint of strain in the Korean Arraign. Sciatica's cannibal is impressive in Cancan de Maori but is rather too fragmented in Londonderry Air . Sciascia is fortunate in having such a musical and supportive accompanist as Mara Corazza who has an impressive grasp of style. The recording has a warm acoustic but includes distracting sniffing noises.

ALL ABOUT Maestro STEFANO SCIASCIA

Stefano Sciascia was born in Turin, on 7th September, 1960. He began studying double bass at the age of sixteen.  He soon began playing with various orchestras, including Turin Orchestra della RAI,Claudio Scimone’s Solisti Veneti and the Chamber Orchestra Orchestra da Camera di Padova e del Veneto, performing throughout Europe and North America (at the Edinburgh Festival, Wien Musikverein, Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Milano Teatro La Scala, and in Boston, New York, Washington, Los Angeles, San Francisco,...). 

At the same time he devoted himself to researching new music and transcribing it for double bass, enriching thus his instrument’s solo repertoire. In 1994 he recorded his first CD for the record label Rivo Alto: 
- Opere per contrabbasso e pianoforte  / G. Bottesini.

In the few following years more records were released:
1996 Rivo Alto "Gran Quintetto in do minore e Sonate a Quattro"  /G.Bottesini, G.Rossini
1998 Rivo Alto "Quella Fiamma" G.B. Pergolesi, A. Vivaldi, N.A. Porpora, B. Marcello Arie del ‘700 per contrabbasso e pianoforte
1999 Rivo Alto "Concerto"  D.Dragonetti, S.Koussevitzky ,G.Bottesini
2000 Rivo Alto "Elegie"  E. Bloch, G. Faure, F. Poulanc, C. Debussy, …
2002 Rivo Alto "Songs of the World" Canzoni tradizionali da tutto il mondo
2004 Stefano Sciascia Production "Mantra 22.22"  Meditazione per contrabbasso solo.

In 1999 King Records Japan includes two tracks from “Quella Fiamma” in the compilation” King of Bass”. 
In January 2003 the same record label releases a Japanese version of “Songs of the World” with the title “Contrabbasso !”. also In November 2005 the same record label releases for ASIAN market from Taipei a export version compiration album with the title "King of Bass Ultimate" 

The record is distributed internationally through multinational companies such as Virgin Megastore and Tower Records. and HMV, Amazon etc. In June 2003 double bassist Yoshihiro Utsumi founded the S.E.J. (Sciascia Ensemble Japan) in Kobe. This ensemble of musicians bearing Sciascia’s name is very active and performs throughout Japan. 

In June 2001 Stefano Sciascia made his debut in the USA: he performed a recital at the Butler University of Indianaplis during the I.S.B. (International Society of Bassist) Convention.

Two years later he received a standing ovation at the university of Richmond, Virginia during the I.S.B. Convention of 2003.

On the next edition (June 2005) he play at the Main Recital Hall of Western Michigan University in  Kalamazoo. On this occasion he has been asked to play the Amati double bass which had belonged to Serge Koussevitzky and was donated to the foundation by Gary Karr. 

In fall 2004 the magazine “Double Bassist” dedicated a long article to him. The article consists of an interview by editor Maggie Williams and deals with his career, concentrating especially on his last release: Mantra 22.22. 

In September 2004 he was invited in Japan where he taught master classes and played concerts in Tokyo, Osaka and Kobe. 

He released a new CD from Stefano Sciascia Production in Autumn 2005 dedicated to
"G.Bottesini Adagio Melanconico e Appassionato"  and it will feature the precious collaboration of pianist David Giovanni Leonardi, who has been playing with Sciascia ever since their first recording together, ten years ago. The Sciascia-Leonardi duo has been performing in Italy and abroad since 1994. 

Stefano Sciascia is head teacher of the double bass class at the Conservatorio di Musica “G. Tartini” in Trieste. He plays an eighteenth century Italian fine instrument (please check those photos at his International-fanclub-site  

SEJSEJSEJSEJSEJSEJSEJSEJSEJ

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Sciascia Ensemble Japan  established in KOBE JAPAN

Representative : Maestro Stefano Sciascia (Italy)    Producer: Yoshihiro Utsumi(Japan)

Office: Studio J  Nagata Kobe Japan

mail to : Yoshihiro Utsumi  

Details Data About Yoshihiro Utsumi's Contrabass  " SCARABEO " (named by Maestro Stefano Sciascia on 1st.Feb.2005)  Height: 190cm with Endpin Upper B = 61cm Lower B = 73cm Between C = 44cm String Length: 114cm Thickness body at C carve 19cm 6/4 sized Annonimous.  String : Pirastro Original Flat-Chrome Solo for Orchestra tune 1=G, 2=D, 3=A, 4=E   Rosin: POPS' (USA) and ALASKA (Germany) Bow: H.Pfitzner with Black Hair A=442Hz  

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