Saxophone Concertos
Nobuya Sugawa (saxophone) BBC Philharmonic, Yutaka Sado Nobuya Sugawa is one of the most distinguished wind instrumentalists in Japan. He is joined here by the BBC
Philharmonic under Yutaka Sado to perform works by Yoshimatsu and Honda, both of which are dedicated to him.
He also plays works by Ibert and Larsson which are firmly established in the saxophone’s concert repertoire.
Sugawa performs in Japan and throughout the world and over the years has received numerous prizes and awards.
Takashi Yoshimatsu, who has a long-term association with Chandos, in 1994 wrote a concerto for Sugawa titled
Cyber-bird, a piece which utilises all the functions of the saxophone, and fuses classical, ethnic and jazz styles.
When Sugawa approached Yoshimatsu for a new concerto, the composer declined, saying, ‘I can’t compose a new
work that surpasses the last one’. Yet, when the idea of a soprano saxophone concerto was mentioned, he writes, ‘I
thought, maybe I can compose a concerto for the soprano sax that highlights “calm”, in contrast to the “motion”
characteristic of Cyber-bird, and so I started to structure a new work’. The ‘Albireo’ of the title is the name of the
double Beta star that sits at the beak of the constellation Cygnus. These two stars shine respectively bright goldenyellow
like a topaz and bluish-green like a sapphire. Yoshimatsu continues, ‘Albireo Mode symbolises the
character of the soprano sax, which is two-fold, combining both coolness and heat, both beauty and depth. That is
why I named the cool and beautiful first part “Topaz” and the hot and deep second part “Sapphire”’. The work was
premiered by Sugawa in 2005 at the Symphony Hall in Osaka.
Toshiyuki Honda began his professional career as a saxophonist. He writes of the connection between Sugawa and
the Concerto du vent, ‘Nobuya Sugawa, a saxophone player like me and a friend whom I respect very much,
entrusted me with the task of writing a concerto for him, a concerto that would represent a tribute to jazz. People
tend to associate jazz with ad lib and rhythm and blues, but we took a slightly different direction… It was a great
honour to be able to record with the BBC Philharmonic and Nobuya Sugawa… “Vent” is the French word for
wind. Please think of the Concerto du vent as a Concerto of the wind’.
Completing the recording are Ibert’s Concertino da camera, one of the best-known works for alto saxophone, by a
composer Yutaka Sado has conducted on many occasions, and Larsson’s popular Concerto for Saxophone and
String Orchestra. “Lovers of the saxophone must welcome a CD that offers two stalwart works in such fine interpretations, as well as significantly extending the recorded repertory.” Gramophone Magazine, July 2008 | 
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