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Style brisé: Gaultier & The French Lu...

1.2M streams

1,236,201

Bach & Weiss

998.2K streams

998,234

Visée: Lute, Guitar & Theorbo

337.1K streams

337,139

The Art of Spanish Variations

229.6K streams

229,551

Bach: Chaconne. Baroque Lute Recital

175.9K streams

175,878

Viennese Lute Music

64.9K streams

64,867

Bach: Three Solo Suites (Transcription...

43K streams

42,979

Iki

4K streams

40,008

De visée

34.7K streams

34,702

Bach: Lute Partita in E Major / Visee:...

30.5K streams

30,536

Biography

At Rikkyo University in Tokyo, Satoh studied music history with Tatsuo Minagawa and guitar with Kazuhito Ohosawa. He gave his first guitar recital in the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan concert hall in 1965. At Rikkyo, he also began his studies of the lute. In 1968, Satoh came to Europe; he studied lute with the pioneering lutenist Eugen Müller-Dombois at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Basel, Switzerland. Two years later, in 1970, he recorded the first LP devoted entirely to the solo Baroque lute; since then he has recorded extensively for Philips, Telefunken, EMI, Harlekijn, and Channel Classics Records. One of his recordings won the Edison Prize. He has been involved in over 50 ensemble recordings, with such artists as Gustav Leonhardt, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, and Elly Ameling. In 1973, he became a professor at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague, Netherlands, a position he held until 2004. He has also taught numerous master classes in Italy (Accademia Musicale Chigiana in Siena), Germany, the USA, Canada and Japan. As a teacher of the baroque lute, he has advocated the use of gut strings with no metal admixtures, and of historically accurate performance techniques. His 1987 book, "Method for the Baroque Lute" (Munich: Tree Editions) is widely used[2] He has been actively composing, and performing and recording his compositions since 1981, including two CDs for Channel Classics. In 2000 he became the president of LGS-Japan (Lute & Early Guitar Society of Japan) and LGS-Europe.