This article explores how Toru Takemitsu transforms literary and natural imagery into sacred soundscapes in his Rain Tree Sketches, drawing on Ōe Kenzaburō’s short story “The Clever Rain Tree” as a starting point for musical meditation on nature and spirituality. This research employs three different approaches to study the transformation process. First, it traces the transformation of Ōe’s literary symbols into Takemitsu’s musical vocabulary while explaining how Zen aesthetics and Japanese shizen (nature) concepts unite text and sound domains. Second, it undertakes a systematic study of musical parameters in the composition to show how motivic development, textural transformation, and temporal organization express water imagery and embody the Zen principle of ma (emptiness). Third, it critically examines modern multimedia visualizations of Rain Tree Sketches to explore both the potential and the limitations of digital technology in mediating the composition’s spiritual dimensions. The analysis demonstrates how Takemitsu created a modernist sacred space through musical techniques that enable listeners to experience transcendence via the deliberate orchestration of sound, silence, and suspended time. More broadly, it shows how modern composers can transform literary spiritual content into abstract musical compositions while preserving their meditative character. This article significantly expands upon preliminary ideas presented at KAMC 2024 conference, 2024, incorporating new theoretical frameworks, extensive analysis of spiritual dimensions, and critical examination of digital mediation not present in the original conference presentation.
Wang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.