Communication: A Greater Analysis of Storytelling in Music Through Mayuzumi’s Bunraku
Abstract
Imaginational responses similar to Eugene Gendlin’s “felt sense” appear in both music and
writing. By studying a single composition for cello, Toshiro Mayuzumi’s Bunraku, writers,
performers, and other creatives can better understand the relationship between two different fine
arts and where their imaginational responses come close to converging. This study was
completed by using Lisa M. Cook’s Venerable Traditions, Modern Manifestations:
Understanding Mayuzumi’s “Bunraku” for Cello and various other sources to learn the
background of the composer, analyze the piece on a technically, perform the piece, and compose
a short story correlating with Bunraku’s nuances. This specific method allows for a researcher to
gain contextual, theoretical, tactile, and emotional comprehension of the piece and to develop a
conclusion regarding the connection between the fine arts as a result. The purpose of this paper is
to use a single composition to reveal the division between two separate fine arts and to provide
methods of manipulating this boundary to integrate the human experience into two or more fine
arts. It is also meant to provide a framework for future studies examining and testing the
relationship between contrasting creative disciplines.