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In page Michiko Hirayama:

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Hirayama studied music at Tokyo University of the Arts, Accademia di Santa Cecilia in Rome, Accademia Chigiana in Siena and at the Mozarteum Salzburg;[1] she soon discovered her affinity for contemporary music. In the early 1950s she moved to Italy.[2] There she met Giacinto Scelsi in 1957, at a concert of Scelsi's neighbor, but she did not initially know that he was a composer. When Scelsi heard Hirayama singing old Japanese songs at a concert, he asked her if she would be interested in his music.[citation needed] They began to work together in 1959.[2] The first work of Scelsi and Hirayama, "Hô", debuted in 1961 at the music festival "Nuova Consonanza".[2] He later dedicated his “Canti del Caprircorno” (1962–1972) to her.[2][3]