The title of this work by Beatrice Dillon is taken from the notion of "basho", developed by Kitaro Nishida, Japanese philosopher and father of the Kyoto school. Kitaro's "basho" refers to a fundamental place or field where things exist and interact. Not just a physical location, but a more abstract space where all experiences, thoughts, and phenomena are interconnected. In Nishida's philosophy, "basho" is a dynamic, living ground where subject and object, self and world, are not separate but mutually interrelated. Inspired by this, Beatrice Dillon develops a music of a complex nature, that never ceases to constitute itself as pure presentation, constantly re-exposed, reactivating at every moment both the object of attention and the listener who aims ... read more