. . . . . . . . . . "Itaru Oki (10 september 1941 - 25 augustus 2020) (Japans \u6C96 \u81F3, Oki Itaru, Suma-ku, K\u014Dbe, prefectuur Hy\u014Dgo) was een Japanse jazztrompettist en -kornettist. Hij behoorde tot de eerste generatie van freejazz-muzikanten in Japan."@nl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "\u6C96 \u81F3\uFF08\u304A\u304D \u3044\u305F\u308B\u30011941\u5E749\u670810\u65E5 - 2020\u5E748\u670825\u65E5\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u306E\u594F\u8005\u3067\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . . . . "Itaru Oki"@en . . . . . . "Itaru Oki (jap. \u6C96 \u81F3, Oki Itaru; * 10. September 1941 im Suma-ku, K\u014Dbe, Pr\u00E4fektur Hy\u014Dgo; \u2020 25. August 2020 in Paris) war ein japanischer Jazztrompeter und -kornettist. Er geh\u00F6rte zur ersten Generation des Free Jazz in Japan."@de . "1103928776"^^ . . . "Itaru Oki"@de . . . . . "53302890"^^ . . . . . . "Itaru Oki (jap. \u6C96 \u81F3, Oki Itaru; * 10. September 1941 im Suma-ku, K\u014Dbe, Pr\u00E4fektur Hy\u014Dgo; \u2020 25. August 2020 in Paris) war ein japanischer Jazztrompeter und -kornettist. Er geh\u00F6rte zur ersten Generation des Free Jazz in Japan."@de . . "\u6C96 \u81F3\uFF08\u304A\u304D \u3044\u305F\u308B\u30011941\u5E749\u670810\u65E5 - 2020\u5E748\u670825\u65E5\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u306E\u594F\u8005\u3067\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . "Itaru Oki (10 september 1941 - 25 augustus 2020) (Japans \u6C96 \u81F3, Oki Itaru, Suma-ku, K\u014Dbe, prefectuur Hy\u014Dgo) was een Japanse jazztrompettist en -kornettist. Hij behoorde tot de eerste generatie van freejazz-muzikanten in Japan."@nl . . . "2141"^^ . . . . "Itaru Oki (\u6C96 \u81F3, Oki Itaru, September 10, 1941 \u2013 August 25, 2020) was a Japanese jazz trumpeter and flugelhornist. Oki was born in Kobe. He began studying koto as a child, under instruction from his mother, who was a professional kotoist. He took up trumpet from 1955 and played in high school bands, then enrolled at , where he majored in architecture and concurrently played in Dixieland jazz ensembles."@en . . . . . "\u6C96\u81F3"@ja . . . "Itaru Oki (\u6C96 \u81F3, Oki Itaru, September 10, 1941 \u2013 August 25, 2020) was a Japanese jazz trumpeter and flugelhornist. Oki was born in Kobe. He began studying koto as a child, under instruction from his mother, who was a professional kotoist. He took up trumpet from 1955 and played in high school bands, then enrolled at , where he majored in architecture and concurrently played in Dixieland jazz ensembles. Early in his career, Oki studied under Fumio Nanri, Kenny Dorham, and Sadao Watanabe, and in the 1960s and 1970s played with , , Kosuke Mine, and . In 1966, he was a cofounder of ESSG, along with Masahiko Sato, Mototeru Takagi, and Masahiko Togashi. In 1974, Oki relocated to Paris, where he played with Japanese expat Takashi Kako and played across Europe with Art Farmer, Maynard Ferguson, Noah Howard, Lee Konitz, Steve Lacy, Michel Pilz, and Sam Rivers. In 1992 he became a member of the ensemble.He started to work since 2015, in Paris with pianist Fran\u00E7ois Tusques, accordion player Claude Parle & Isabel Juan Pera singer.The French label \"Improvising Beings\" has edited a CD: \"Le chant du Jubjub\" It's a reference to Lewis Carroll. \u00C9couter Tchangode\u00EF itaru oki, Kent carter trio : jeux d\u2019ombres, perfect emptiness, jazz \u00E0 vienne"@en . . . "Itaru Oki"@nl . .