Archive for the 'Japanese Music' Category

Climb the Mind – Chikyuu no kaori

Saturday, November 11th, 2006

japanese rock music, indie, climb the mind, chikyuu no kaori, denaturization, ?????

Artist: Climb the Mind
Song: ????? (Chikyuu no kaori [Fragrance of the earth])
From album: Denaturization
Genre: Hotwind Rock
[Buy CD][Website]

Climb the Mind is a Japanese three-piece that makes songs of sonorous richness and scope. The guitars come in emotive waves of intensity somewhere between kicking down a door and setting a forest fire, and change mood and target like a restless sandstorm in open expanses.

Feels something like walking into a storm while safely wrapped in a warm, purposeful resolve.

Bandwagon – What Went Wrong!!

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

bandwagon, japanese indie, japan, rock, what went wrong!!, the eternal allergy maxi single

Artist: Bandwagon
Song: What Went Wrong!!
From album: The Eternal Allergy
Genre: Guitarmony Rock
[Buy CD|Mp3s][Website]

Here’s some almost feelgoody upbeatish rockiness. I’m going to use it to say bubye to summer even though it may not be particularly appropriate.

It is now cold in the DC area, to say nothing of the rest of the world.

Downy – ? (Delta)

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

 

Artist: Downy Song: ? (Delta) Album: ?? 4th (Mudai)

Here’s the video that first introduced me to downy. It came like manna from heaven at a time when I was at a dead end in my exploration of Japanese music.

The Japanese music industry has a whole lot in common with the American music industry; in fact, it’s probably a glimpse of the American Industry’s near future state: A behemoth of advertising, mass production, formulaic repetition, and blatant revenue creation. Years ago I used to hear it rumored that the Backstreet Boys and N’Sync etc. were creations of record companies, more or less genetically designed to make the most money from the least effort by pandering to a demographic with sparse discernment and extremely liquid assets. Well, often the Japanese industry doesn’t even pretend to hide it, and no one seems to mind.

Take Johhny’s, for instance. It’s more or less a boy band factory. It scouts members based on personal magnetism and charm, and then puts them through boy-band-bootcamp to learn how to dance, and hopefully at least marginally, to sing. Johhny’s does this successfully over and over and over, people keep buying the records, and they end up #1 on the charts. Also, basically each member in one of these groups is guaranteed a starring role in at least one tv drama, product endorsement deals, and various variety/gameshow appearances, and in fact, most groups actually get their very own TV show.

Not that any of this is intrinsically bad, it just gets old after a while. One can, perhaps, only take so much of the same sound, same routine. Thank goodness for downy, my first taste of life after so long having wandered in the aural wasteland.

Listen, listen again, then let go and really hear.

The Great Rollingflower – Yogi Tea

Monday, August 21st, 2006

  the great rollingflower, yogi tea, japanese indie, jam, rock

Artist: The Great Rollingflower
Song: Yogi Tea
From album: Pop Cuts In Sensations
Genre: Rolling Jam Wave
[Buy CD|Mp3s][Website]

Since I’ve never been surfing I can imagine The Great Rollingflower is like riding a smooth blue, crystal-clear wave that never ends. Well eventually it ends, but not with a mouthful of saltwater; and it probably won’t give you much of a tan either.

This song undulates like a wave though, like a series of waves really, peaks and troughs. It seems to work particularly well if you aren’t concentrating on it, seeping like salt air into your surroundings.

You will also find quite a few mp3s from live jam sessions on their website.

Takagi Masakatsu

Saturday, August 19th, 2006

 

Artist: Takagi Masakatsu
Song: Girls
[Buy CDs/DVDs|itunes][Artist’s Site]

Found via “Film. Music. Philosophy.”, Takagi Masakatsu has instantly become one of my top favorite multimedia artists. He paints with video, over it, through it, around and into it. Watching his incredible moving paintings is like seeing into a world of true forms. In his world, everything is literally burning with life and color and emotional essence; the sky, the wind, everything. It’s all more real than one could imagine.

The miraculous movement and flow of his works is wrapped up in what he calls the missing color of sound; the expressive ambient musical compositions he writes for each piece. The song in this post is “girls” from his album “Coieda”.

Despite the Macsturbatory propaganda, the Apple Pro video piece on him is of a very good quality, and shows some excellent samples of his work. In this PopJam interview he talks a bit about his art, and there are several other nice clips, though at a much lower resolution. His own site has many many large stills from the works as well.

Simply put, this stuff is effing gorgeous. Links: [1][2][3][4][5]

zOoOoOm – Rumble Bush

Thursday, August 17th, 2006

zOoOoOm, japan, japanese indie, eight my heart, rumble bush

Artist: zOoOoOm
Song: Rumble Bush
From album: Eight My Heart
Genre: Twitterfrolica
[Buy CD|Mp3s][Website]

It seems that this song could have been recorded live over the course of a day, through the woods and streams of some sunny make-believe world. The sound crew would have followed the singer, this adorably frisky woodland nymphish creature, as she gallivanted and cavorted, cartwheeled and marched around her hilly countryside domain.

Sounds and words burst out spontaneously as little yelps and yells of discovery and curiosity, with occasional meandering musings on general jubilation. The overall result is a mood of frivolously innocent intensity and inescapable glow.

Sparta Locals – Boku wa Lion

Saturday, July 22nd, 2006

sparta locals, japanese indie, rock, jrock, boku wa/ha lion, dreamer

Artist: Sparta Locals
Song: Boku wa Lion (??????)
From album: Dreamer
Genre: Gutrock
[Buy CD|Mp3s][Website][Interview]

When I heard this song on Rock Sick I had to have it. Sparta Locals are a very well known band in Japanese indieish circles but somehow I never gave them a chance, filing them away in the “all sound the same” category. If I had heard this song first it would have been a different story altogether.

This song can stand alone completely on its own merit, and the chorus can stand alone in the song, and the vocals stand at the heart of it all. This is the kind of feeling that got me into genres ending in “core” in my youth. It’s powerful and forceful in the way that you can feel him pushing sound out with every muscle in his body; every cell is strained to the limit. It’s that utterness that inspires. At times it sounds like he’s putting parts of his life into it, condensing memories, and emotions, and breathing, and aching all at once, wrapping them around simple words, (i’m a lion) and heaving them with all his might into the atmosphere.

Dhal – Algebra

Friday, July 21st, 2006

dhal, algebra, japanese electronica, trance, underground music, indies, downy, aoki robin

Artist: Dhal
Song: Algebra
From album: Cacophony
Genre: Darktronica
[Buy CD|Mp3s][Website]

Hey, I need your help with testing this new streaming mp3 player I made. It seems to work fine for me, but we all know that’s never the end of it. If you would be so kind as to try it out and let me know if everything works for you: fast forward, rewind, volume, pause/play, and the draggable playhead, (which should appear when the song is fully loaded) I would appreciate it greatly! If something doesn’t work or doesn’t work correctly, please leave a comment about it!

This is Dhal, the current band of Downy’s Aoki Robin. I’m not sure why it has taken me so long to post a song of theirs, but I’m using it to christen the new streaming player. I used this song to test during the course of creating, coding, and debugging the mp3 player; so I have listened to different bits of it probably thousands of times in the past 24 hours. So the fact that I’m not sick of it by now is saying something indeed.

I’ve become a bit desensitized to it by now, but It still feels like the song is being played, or listened to, in a vacuum. Probably the vacuum of space. It’s the kind of dark where you see blackness everywhere, except for the light of interplanetary eclipses and their reflections.

A little while ago Mictian mentioned a Dhal Fansite which has some more information on the band.