Rentaro Taki

Rentarō Taki (滝 廉太郎, Taki Rentarō; 24 August 1879 – 29 June 1903) was a Japanese pianist and composer of the Meiji era. Taki was born in Tokyo, but moved to many places during his childhood owing to his father's job. He went to Tokyo Music School (now known as Tokyo University of the Arts) and was taught by Nobu Koda, graduating in 1901. One of his famous pieces is "Kōjō no Tsuki" (Moon Over the Ruined Castle), which was included in the songbook for junior high school students, along with the "Hakone-Hachiri" (箱根八里). "Hana" (花, "Flower") is also a well-known song. In the same year, Taki went to the Leipzig Conservatory in Germany for further studies, but fell seriously ill with pulmonary tuberculosis and therefore returned to Japan. He lived quietly in the country afterwards, but soon died at the age of 23. His posthumous work is a solo piano piece called "Urami" (憾, "Regret"), which he wrote four months before he died.

抒情組曲『瀧 廉太郎』合唱と室内アンサンブルによる - 2007-11-21T00:00:00.000000Z

Japanese Melodies - 2005-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z

Rentaro Taki: Menuetto & Beauerswert, 2 Piano Pieces - 2025-07-11T00:00:00.000000Z

Kojo no Tsuki. The Moon over the Ruined Castle (Arr. for Vibraphone and Harp) - 2021-08-06T00:00:00.000000Z

花 (濁った隅田川バージョン) - 2019-03-06T00:00:00.000000Z

Similar Artists

Ayako Tanaka

Tapei Fine Arts Trio

Beijing Central Philharmonic Orchestra

Takanobu Saito

石田泰尚

Mariko Senju

Yasushi Akutagawa

宮田 大

Narimichi Kawabata

石田組

Giacomo Cataldo

Kozaburo Hirai

Mischa Elman

Arnhem Philharmonic Orchestra

伊藤悠貴

Shin’ichirō Ikebe

藤森亮一(チェロ)

イギリス民謡

Ayako Takagi

Kosaku Yamada