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Leta, what is Ryuichi Sakamoto trying to say?

What Leta Ryuichi Sakamoto wants to express is that music is a cross-cultural language.

Leta Ryuichi Sakamoto is a highly respected musician and composer. His music works have not only influenced the Japanese mainland, but also been deeply loved by music lovers all over the world. His music transcends cultures and national boundaries and becomes a language that transcends languages and cultures.

In Leta Ryuichi Sakamoto's music, we can hear elements from different cultures, such as classical music, rock music, electronic music and so on. His music works are not only a musical style, but also a cultural exchange and integration. His music works contain respect and understanding for different cultures, and also show the infinite possibilities in music.

The tragic sense of fate that life can never choose, the pure pursuit and reserve of human nature, the entanglement and denial of strange passions, and the blindness and avoidance of truth and belief flow in the beautiful piano, all of which are sometimes unbearable, sometimes so weak, and the choice of right and wrong is even more overwhelming and exhausting.

Leta's experience in Ryuichi Sakamoto

On January 17th, 1952, Ryuichi Sakamoto was born in Nakano District, Tokyo. He started playing the piano at the age of 3, and wrote his first song "Song of Rabbit" in kindergarten. In 1959, he entered Abel Tamata, Setagaya District, Tokyo, where he studied at Lizu Shibuya Primary School. At the age of 1, I studied composition with Taminosuke Matsumoto, a professor at Tokyo University of the Arts.

Ryuichi Sakamoto Middle School is enrolled in Chitose Middle School in Shitiangu District and Shinjuku High School in Tokyo. In junior high school, he deeply loved the Beatles' music, participated in the basketball team and fell in love with Claude Debussy's works.

In high school, I often skipped classes and went to Shinjuku to soak in jazz cafes, watch movies, visit bookstores and participate in student parades. Influenced by the leftist youth, he was fascinated by the works of John Cage and Luc Ge Daer.