Media

National Endowment for the Arts

Although pianist and composer Tomoko Ozawa isn’t the first musician to find inspiration in Emily Dickinson—Aaron Copland wrote a 12-song cycle around her poems—Ozawa seems to best capture the poet’s mystery and distinctive, unconventional rhythms. Gentian, Ozawa’s ten-track 2015 album, features recitations of Dickinson’s poems over unusual, meditative compositions that beautifully convey the poet’s voice.”

Across Disciplines: When Poetry Inspires Jazz (April, 2015)

Emily Dickinson in Song - A Discography, 1925-2019

“Ozawa, Tomoko. Gentian. Tomoko Ozawa, piano, vocals; Milena Jancuric, flute; Juan Antonio Garcia Illanas, soprano saxophone; Robert Taylor, double/electric bass; Noam Israeli, drums. Tomoko-ozawa.com, 2014. [jazz] "Angels in the early morning"; "Tell all the truth but tell it slant"; "It's like the light"; "God made a little gentian"; "I never saw a moor" [Other works]”

Discography of Emily Dickinson Songs

Virginia Music - Jazz Radio Station - Netherlands  

Recommendations January, 2015                             

The Epileptic Gibbon podcast music show - UK                    

Episode 154 The White Dwarf 2015/05/18

Episode 158 Killer Whale 2015/07/16

Episode 172 Ashes to Ashes 2016/01/24          

Mix Cloud Episode 158 Killer Wale

Earbits 

http://www.earbits.com/                                                                                                                                                    

The Emily Dickinson International Society (EDIS)  

Bulletin. Volume 27, November/December 2015