ARTISTS & PROGRAM

ARTISTS

Joe Hisaishi&Music Future Band

Piano : Maki Namekawa

PROGRAM

Joe Hisaishi:New Piece *World premiere

Joe Hisaishi:Piano Sonata

Steve Reich:Music for 18 Musicians

*The program is subject to change.

SCHEDULE & TICKET

SCHEDULE

TOKYO (JAPAN)
2025.10.22(Wed)
Show starts at 19:00 (Doors 18:00)
NAGANO (JAPAN)
2025.10.23(Thu)
Show starts at 18:30 (Doors 17:30)

TICKET

TOKYO
S JPY 12,000(Tax in)
A JPY 10,000(Tax in)
B JPY 8,000(Tax in)
NAGANO
S JPY 10,000(Tax in)
A JPY 8,000(Tax in)
B JPY 6,000(Tax in)
*Tickets for this performance are not for sale on resale sites such as viagogo. Please note that even if you purchase them, you will not be able to enter the venue.

Advance Reservation

7/24(Thu)12:00~8/5(Tue)18:00

Release

8/9(Sat)12:00~
Planned by Wonder City
Organizer (Tokyo):Nippon TV, Avex Classics International
Organizer (Nagano):TV Shinshu, Nippon TV, Avex Classics International
Production:Avex Classics International
Production cooperation:promax
Promotor:Sunrise Promotion Tokyo

PROFILE

Joe Hisaishi

Joe Hisaishi
Hisaishi Began his career as a contemporary music composer and started to develop his unique style in minimal music when he graduated from conservatory in Japan. His career as a solo artist began with the presentation of MKWAJU in 1981 and the release of his first album Information in 1982. Since his debut, Hisaishi has released nearly 40 solo albums. The first CD A Symphonic Celebration released from Deutsche Grammophon (2023) hit the first prize on US Billboard Classical Albums & Classical Crossover Albums Chart twice.
From Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984) to The Boy and the Heron (2023), Hisaishi has produced music for Hayao Miyazaki films. He has collaborated on the music production of over 80 films at home and abroad, and his works have won many awards including several Outstanding Achievement in Music prizes of Japan Academy Film Prize, and the Winsor McCay Award at the 51st Annie Awards in 2024.
In 2004, he took on the position of Principal Music Director of the New Japan Philharmonic “World Dream Orchestra”. Since 2014, he has been working as a producer and holding contemporary music concerts called “JOE HISAISHI presents MUSIC FUTURE”. He also started leading a concert series “Future Orchestra Classics” in 2019 and released Beethoven: Complete Symphonies that was given “Special Prize” from 57th Record Academy Award Japan 2019.
The world tour "Joe Hisaishi Symphonic Concert: Music from the Studio Ghibli Films of Hayao Miyazaki", which he started in 2017, has captivated huge live audiences in his recent sold-out performances at Madison Square Garden, New York over 3 nights, La Défense in Paris, Wembley Arena in London, Olympic Hall in Munich, among others. In July 2025, the tour concluded with a final performance at Tokyo Dome. Attracting a total of 130,000 fans across 3 shows, it marked a significant milestone in music history.
In recent years, he works as a classical music conductor and also composed new works in a contemporary music style, including The East Land Symphony (Symphony No. 1) (2016), The Border Concerto for 3 Horns and Orchestra (2020), Symphony No. 2 (2021), Metaphysica (Symphony No. 3) (2021) and Viola Saga for Orchestra (2023). In November 2024, he premiered his Harp Concerto, a joint commission by four organizations, including the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Hisaishi has collaborated with a wide range of artists including Philip Glass, David Lang, Mischa Maisky, and orchestra such as the Vienna Symphony Orchestra, Helsinki Philharmonic, London Symphony Orchestra, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Philadelphia Orchestra, among others.
He was appointed as Composer-in-Association of Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in April 2024. He is the Music Director with Japan Century Symphony Orchestra from April 2025.

Maki Namekawa

Maki Namekawa
Maki Namekawa, one of the leading pianists of her generation, has earned a unique reputation for her commitment to four centuries of great piano music with a concert repertory that is broad, colorful, and ambitious, ranging from neglected masterpieces by J.S. Bach, Mendelssohn, Berg to new works by many of today’s leading composers. The impressive list of music especially written for her includes “Piano Sonata” by Philip Glass and Joe Hisaishi, headlining a list of first performances of music by Elliot Goldenthal, Keith Jarrett, Arvo Pärt, Hania Rani. Recently she has been particularly in demand for programs featuring Philip Glass’ “The Complete 20 Piano Etudes”, which she premiered together with the composer in 2013, Keith Jarrett‘s legendary “The Köln Concert”, and Chick Corea’s evocative “Children’s Songs”.
Maki Namekawa’s prize-winning recordings include the first complete solo performance of the Glass’ “The Complete 20 Piano Etudes”, Glass’ “Piano Sonata” and the piano suite from film music “Mishima”, especially crafted for her by Glass specialist Michael Riesman, “Sunrise Falling” featuring the music of Isang Yun, and Heinz Winbeck’s remarkable homage to Franz Schubert’s “Lebensstürme”.
Her double-CD album of “The Complete 20 Piano Etudes” by Philip Glass has been released in 2014, reaching number 1 of the iTunes Classic charts and receiving highste praise by BBC Music Magazine in United Kingdom.
Creative collaborations are an important part of Maki Namekawa’s artistic profile and include a series of concerts with world music star Angelique Kidjo as well as live dance performances featuring choreographers Lucinda Childs, Justin Peck, Tiler Peck, Bobbi Jene Smith.
Since 2014 she presents “Pianographique” integrating piano performances with live AI and computer generated images created by Cori O’Lan, and has been performed in 10 countries. In May 2025 this project was invited to perform at Expo2025 Osaka.
She performs regularly at international venues such as Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center New York, Walt Disney Hall Los Angeles, Davies Symphony Hall San Francisco, Berlin Philharmonie, Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, Barbican Centre and Wigmore Hall in London, Musikverein Vienna, Philharmonie de Paris and Cité de la Musique Paris, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Suntory Hall and Sumida Triphony Hall in Tokyo.
She has performed at the most important festivals of our time: the Salzburg Festival, the New York Lincoln Center Festival, the Ars Electronica Festival in Austria, Musik-Biennale Berlin, the Rheingau Music Festival and the Verbier Festival in Switzerland.
Since her first appearance at the Piano-Festival Ruhr in 2002, where she took part in its closing concert on the recommendation of pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard, she has been a regular guest at the festival and was awarded the “Piano-Festival Ruhr Prize” in 2017.

OUTLINE

Having developed an interest in minimal music after his student days, Joe Hisaishi started his career as a contemporary composer. Over the last 30 years, he has been well known to have composed for many film scores; he has also been touring as a conductor in the last year. However, during this time, he has also continued to compose minimal music, the music which started his love for composition.
In 2014, Hisaishi started his extremely unique concert series ‘MUSIC FUTURE’ where he personally hand selects the repertoire in hopes of introducing new composers to the Japanese public.
The first of the concert series, ‘Vol.1’ in 2014 saw him introduce the works of Arvo Part and Henryk Gorecki as well as two of his new minimalistic compositions. He also performed music by Nico Muhly, a renowned post-classical composer – A genre seemingly popular with the younger generation in recent days. In ‘Vol.2’ (2015) he performed Steve Reich’s ‘Octet’, John Adams’s ‘Chamber Symphony’ and his own work, this time with largely monophonic features, including ‘Single Track Music 1 for 4 Saxophones & Percussion’ and ‘Chamber Symphony’ for six-string electric violin. ‘Vol.3’ (2016) included a program of works by Pulitzer Prize winner, David Lang and ‘Chamber Symphony No.1’ by Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg. ‘Vol.4’ (2017) introduced Gabriel Prokofiev’s ‘String Quartet No. 2’ and Hisaishi’s own composition ‘Chamber Symphony No. 2 – The Black Fireworks’ performed on Bandoneon by Kazuma Miura. ‘Vol.5’(2018) he invited soloists Maya Beiser (cello) and Molly Netter (soprano). In this year, he also joined forces with his great friend David Lang which saw him perform not only in Tokyo but also in New York. And ‘Vol.6’(2019) where he welcomed the world-renowned piano duo, Maki Namekawa and Dennis Russell Davies. He also performed his own compositions again and Philip Glass’s ‘Piano Sonata’ which created a huge buzz in Japan. In ‘Vol.7’ (2020) , he introduced a piece by Nico Muhly who couldn’t come to Japan due to the influence of the pandemic. ‘Vol.8’ in 2021 introduced pieces such as Bryce Dessner and Lepo Sumera. In ‘Vol.9’(2022), where Nico Muhly finally came to Japan, Hisaishi performed the viola concerto ‘Viola Saga’ for viola player Nadia Sirota, and Nico Muhry performed ‘Roots, Pulses’, which was commissioned for this concert and performed in New York. In 2023, the 10th year of the series, ‘Vol.10’ featured Terry Riley, whom Hisaishi had always admired, and a collaboration that will go down in the history of minimal music was realized. ‘Vol.11’(2024), we had collaborated with ‘FUTURE ORCHESTRA CLASSICS’, which Joe Hisaishi has conducted classics from a composer’s perspective.
In 2025, we will finally be performing Steve Reich's ‘Music for 18 Musicians,’ a piece that has been on our list of pieces since the beginning of MUSIC FUTURE.
The 6th Young Composerʼs Competition
Call for original new works by young composers!
Selected works will have their world premiere at the “Music Future Vol.12”.
a concert organized by Joe Hisaishi to present cutting-edge music!