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Japanese Progressive Rock presented by DamoX

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guldbamsen Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 18 2012 at 17:56
I simply adore this man's playing. There is no getting around that. I have some Ghost albums and will certainly keep a look out for some The Stars. Definitely!
I also have the one where he plays together with Boris - setting fire to the notes from his guitar. Powerful like an exploding elephant or something to that effect. I really dig that album.
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 24 2013 at 00:25
Hi, Japanesque progressive rock freaks! Big smile
A terribly belated happy new year from me. Embarrassed

Recently I'm a bit too pressed with attending gigs (my pleasure Big smile) or with kicking spambots away (sucky thang Dead) to update my blog, but hey, I've got a fascinating news ... Oboreta Ebi No Kenshi Hokokusho (The Autopsy Report Of Drowned Shrimp) say they will finally release their debut album titled "Anomalocaris" upon March 25, 2013. Wow!


Anomalocaris (excerpt)

Visually / auditorily weird brock rock blended with heavy, funk, avantgarde, toybox-ish, or groovin (Washawasha Gugyagya, according to what they say lol). Looking forward to their fantastic stuff, and I'll give you feedback here about the late March.


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tapfret Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 04 2013 at 00:02
^Sounds like Primus in space with keyboards.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote aapatsos Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 04 2013 at 06:27
Keishiro, have you got some suggestions for me from the Heavy Prog and Prog Metal side of Japan please (and albums)
 
bands that I (roughly) know so far
Bi Kyo Ran
Ningen-Isu
The Black Mages
Earthbound Papas
Marge Litch (not listened much though)
 
would like to play some more Japanese scene in my show!


Edited by aapatsos - February 04 2013 at 06:28
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 04 2013 at 06:57
^ Hey Athanasios, check this. Actually my favourite Heavy Prog one.

Junaokissei - BANDVIVIL

In PA they're in JRF subgenre but I believe they're one of the most impressive Heavy Prog ones. Big smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 04 2013 at 07:01
Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

^Sounds like Primus in space with keyboards.
LOL

Indeed ... I'll post my impression (review?) for their stuffs soon after getting their debut album. Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 10 2013 at 10:52
Hi, Japanese freaks. Cool

Previously Djamra's gig in Comin, Hiroshima has been reported, and let me introduce a Japanese (non-progressive) jazz trumpeter Takayuki KAWAMURA, who played as a duo with YUMIYUMI (piano) before Djamra playing upon the same stage.


Yumiyumi (piano) and Takayuki (trumpet) ... anyway, on the rightest side of the audience was me (not in this pic though lol)
Quote Hailed from Iwakuni, Japan, Takayuki KAWAMURA has got started as a trumpeter since 10 years old. Via some brass combos, he has devoted himself to the jazz music scene.

His debut album "Harbor Wind", featuring his original tunes, was out in 2007, that could get appreciated in Japanese audio / music world. And in 2010, his ballad work "Ballads", in collaboration with his music mates especially a pianist Yumiko Kusano (Yumiyumi), was released.

Ballads (2010) - Takayuki KAWAMURA's second work

An enjoyable jazzpetter.

It was January 2013 I've listened to his play for the first time. He played with a female pianist Yumi, as if his warm trumpet sounds could have veil her kind piano play. Sometimes powerful like a metallic element, and sometimes quiet like a cool water stream ... his play could be kaleidoscopic and versatile, I remember.

Anyway, his solo (in collaboration with some music mates including Yumiyumi) album "Ballads" notifies me that scape of his in early 2013. This album consists of four traditional / popular songs covered by him and four original ones written by Takayuki, and it's impressive he could digest all of material for his jazzy nutrition in this creation. In traditional tracks, he plays quietly, steadily, but usually powerfully and excessively. As though he could have grabbed these "big" ones as his items. And in "Dark Matter", that has been launched on stage previously, Yumiyumi's piano is solemn and motherly like Maria, and Takayuki's trumpet sounds like a flexible man who swims pleasantly and elegantly ... on the contrary, his swimming sometimes drinks completely the whole piano stream ... powerfully and enthusiastically. Not simple horn kicks but explosive palpitation sometimes, like a brave hero. The last "Track Nine" is his jack-in-the-box we can say. Really his willful play makes us smile ... his hearty heart we can hear apparently. Enjoy such an immeasurably powerful and fantastically warmhearted album.


LOLWUT


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 10 2013 at 11:18
And glad to say, a Japanese Zeuhlish chamber theatre KAKUSENJO NO ONGAKU (Base Of Fiction) have been included in Progarchives a while before! Clap
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=7858


Kakusenjo No Ongaku, a Japanese chamber theatre project
Quote A Japanese "silent" chamber rock commune KAKUSENJO NO ONGAKU (Base Of Fiction) were formed in 1992 as a one-man project by Jyoji SAWADA, an eclectic Japanese musician well versed in free-experimental, noise, jazz, modern, or Brazilian music scenes. In the beginning Jyoji has incarnated his auditory / visual ideas as this project, that has invited lots of musicians, artists or collaborators like Seiichi YAMAMOTO (ex-Boredoms, Omoide Hatoba), Natsuki KIDO (ex-Bondage Fruit, Salle Gaveau, Korekyojinn, P.O.N.), Tatsuya YOSHIDA, or Hoppy KAMIYAMA. A flood of his material could be crystallized as an eponymous album released via Hoppy’s label God Mountain in 1994 finally.

After long hibernation, KAKUSENJO NO ONGAKU has got reactivated since 2007. Jyoji usually launches artistic stages in collaboration with lots of musicians and performers here and there in Japan.

Kakusenjo No Ongaku (1994) - KAKUSENJO NO ONGAKU

This chamber theatre is not fictional but too realistic to be visualized.

After a short cynic raised perpendicularly, we can meet persistent sound mixture between a violin-based Zeuhlic tragedy upon the former part, a keen guitar violence merged with improvised rhythmic horrorvision upon the middle, and a deeply ethnic plus massively risky percussive extension created by fire and water palpitation upon the latter. Each part seems estranged from other at a quick listen but don't be deceived ... we can understand they should link together smoothly by listening again and again. Realism might be said via such a connection I imagine? This phenomenon can be heard in the following track, that consists of toxically randomized improvisation and melodically refined string conversation. Yes it's confrontation and let me say, at the same time, harmonization amongst heaviness, tragicness, and random access.


Realism No Yado

Female voices sound more enthusiastic, more sensual, and more magical, founded with artistic electronics, synthesizers, and strings ... all of that collapse drastically in pieces. On the other hand, drumming and guitar shouting, improvised aggressively, knock explosively and continually. In every material, classical elements (also phrases) or theatrical messages have got introduced directly or indirectly, which could be digested for its nutrition, amazingly. Honest to say, each track title cannot be linked with dramatic soundscape directly, and I guess we cannot hit the mark for their real intention without watching their (especially Jyoji's) visual material featuring dance performance and colourful dress / veils flying here and there on stage.

Obviously inspired by Magma but they should have grabbed more Japanesque articles like Kamikaze, strong miracle wind bringing luckiness for us and kicking against enemies. Such a perpetual change upon the scape can be called as Kakusen (fiction) but this soundscape be not imitative nor unsettled but intensive and perfect as a fusion amongst avantgarde progressive rock music, kaleidoscopic visual art, and Jyoji's sincere mind-games ... yup like the quiet one-minute drama upon the last part of "Shizuka Na Mahiru", really crazy moment. Recommended for all progressive music (including progressive rock) fans and all artistic concrete fans.


East Fantasy


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Edited by DamoXt7942 - February 10 2013 at 11:22
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Sagichim Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 10 2013 at 12:47
Originally posted by aapatsos aapatsos wrote:

Keishiro, have you got some suggestions for me from the Heavy Prog and Prog Metal side of Japan please (and albums)
 
bands that I (roughly) know so far
Bi Kyo Ran
Ningen-Isu
The Black Mages
Earthbound Papas
Marge Litch (not listened much though)
 
would like to play some more Japanese scene in my show!
If I may, I can recommend (and I'm sure Keishiro will back me up on this) Cosmos Factory - Black Hole. Heavy Crimson inspired album. Highly recommended!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote hellogoodbye Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 10 2013 at 13:47
Damo, that KAKUSENJO NO ONGAKU, is wonderfull. Clap I like Takayuki KAWAMURA too. Kind of japanese Booker Little Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 10 2013 at 17:38
Hi, Pierre ... thanks for your appreciation! Hug

As for Kakusenjo No Ongaku, George (historian9) has reminded me ... Jyoji's active now, and he's said KNO's album will be reissued this year. Thumbs Up

Takayuki (nice guy indeed) will be added in JazzMusicArchives sooner or later ... I'll take him there. Thumbs Up
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 10 2013 at 17:42
Originally posted by sagichim sagichim wrote:

If I may, I can recommend (and I'm sure Keishiro will back me up on this) Cosmos Factory - Black Hole. Heavy Crimson inspired album. Highly recommended!
Oh shame, I've listened to "An Old Castle Of Transylvania" long long before ... Embarrassed

Good for me to get drenched in some authentic psych prog sometimes. Approve Thanks Sagi! Big smile

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2013 at 00:21
Okay, it's about time for me to suggest one of Japanese psychedelic / divinity-ism progressive rock pioneers ... J. A. CAESAR. Their weirdness can be called as 'originality', that might not be well-understood by every progressive rock freak, methinks.


J. A. Caesar aka Takaaki TERAHARA

J. A. CAESAR (or J. A. SEAZER) aka Takaaki TERAHARA, born on October 6, 1948, has been renowned and active as a Japanese composer for films or theatres since early 1970s. Takaaki's worked with a writer / director Shuji TERAYAMA for producing Shuji's theater named Tenjo Sajiki and writing / composing soundtracks (one of which was "Den'en Ni Shisu" released in 1974, dedicated to Shuji and his drama). Takaaki has released several albums under the moniker of J. A. CAESAR or J. A. CAESAR RECITAL, and soundtracks in collaboration with other members of Tenjo Sajiki. One of his most famous albums "Kokkyo Junreika" (1973) has been reissued a couple of times, and in March 2013 digitally remastered and re-released with his unreleased live tracks.


Kokkyo Junreika (1973) - J. A. CAESAR

Flood of divinity and psych-solemn brilliance, even though based upon bluesy rock sounds. J. A. CAESAR is a Japanese theatrical superstar, let me shout.

Taking the case of the first track "Echigo Tsutsuishi Oyashirazu", deep drum beating and melody flying / floating blended with mysteriously horrible voices following horrible flute (wabue?) vibes in the very beginning have obvious musical innovation. This project has been based upon illuminative theatre and this makes sense. Takaaki, as a couple of theatre casts, plays auditory dramas. His voices are a bit cheesy but sometimes remind us a strong passion like Demetrio Stratos. "Tenshotan" is a lazy, sloppy story created by a female reciter, with unstable melody lines ... going to extremes is amazing, please feel enough. Bluesy "Haha Koishiya Sangosho" is slightly poppy but a deeply dark bullet launcher. Cannot help stepping back with hearing that, oh man. "Kyojobushi" means "a song for crazy women", followed by "Eimei Shihen", another madness ... that’s it. Drenched in continual shouts and mind-blowing high-tone voices, without refined melodic texture, but this stuff consists of innovative collective, namely such a neat phenomenon brushed up by crazy mademoiselles and crazy Takaaki.



Female extreme pitchshift horror based upon symphonic / psychedelic slowdown in "Wasan" gives us palpitation and chill. Regardless of its melodic beauty and power, something fuzzy can be felt around us. Who knows the reason. Mystery. "Jinriki Hiko No Tame No Enzetsu Soan" is another symphonic psychedelia along with Takaaki’s inorganic but aggressive storytelling, which content is too difficult for me to give an explanation but his mind-altering power affects our brain massively. The following "Minkan Iryojutsu" sounds like an ambient sound hoaxer, that shows fishy medical appearance for addicting common people without knowledge enough. So tough to listen carefully indeed. "Otori No Kuru Hi" is quite suitable for the last scene of this dramatic theatre. Female high-tone voices are crazier than previously, and psychic symphony takes off and flies over and over. Magnificent, powerful percussion and guitar blows our minds so impressively that we cannot avoid squeezing breath into our throat. Our tears get brilliant expression via such a tragic keyboard play upon the very last part.

Nothing can be found except fascination. Excellent.




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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote infocat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2013 at 05:59
Originally posted by sagichim sagichim wrote:

Originally posted by aapatsos aapatsos wrote:

Keishiro, have you got some suggestions for me from the Heavy Prog and Prog Metal side of Japan please (and albums)
 
bands that I (roughly) know so far
Bi Kyo Ran
Ningen-Isu
The Black Mages
Earthbound Papas
Marge Litch (not listened much though)
 
would like to play some more Japanese scene in my show!
If I may, I can recommend (and I'm sure Keishiro will back me up on this) Cosmos Factory - Black Hole. Heavy Crimson inspired album. Highly recommended!
The first Happy Family album is quite heavy (and quite recommended!).
I don't know too many Japanese bands, but you can also try Envy, a "screamo / post-rock" band.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote twseel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 10 2013 at 15:24
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Edited by twseel - June 10 2013 at 06:44
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote daydreamer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2013 at 06:02

 

Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

One of his most famous albums "Kokkyo Junreika" (1973) has been reissued a couple of times, and in March 2013 digitally remastered and re-released with his unreleased live tracks.

Hi Keishiro

AFAIK the March release is not yet available... And speaking about unreleased live tracks in it do you mean bonus CD-R for firstcomers or just complete 2-disk version of the album (that has been issued before only as part of 5CD-set "Tenjo-Sajiki Music Work Collection, vol. 1")?

Dmitry

P.S. I'm a big fan of J.A.Caesar and got 23 of his releases incl. all 3 of his 5CD box-sets "Tenjo-Sajiki Music Work Collection" series.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2013 at 18:58
Originally posted by daydreamer daydreamer wrote:

 

Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

One of his most famous albums "Kokkyo Junreika" (1973) has been reissued a couple of times, and in March 2013 digitally remastered and re-released with his unreleased live tracks.

Hi Keishiro

AFAIK the March release is not yet available... And speaking about unreleased live tracks in it do you mean bonus CD-R for firstcomers or just complete 2-disk version of the album (that has been issued before only as part of 5CD-set "Tenjo-Sajiki Music Work Collection, vol. 1")?

Dmitry

P.S. I'm a big fan of J.A.Caesar and got 23 of his releases incl. all 3 of his 5CD box-sets "Tenjo-Sajiki Music Work Collection" series.

Yeah Dmitry, "Kokkyo Junreika" remastered version will be released at the end of March, 2013 it's said. Wink
And you're a real freak of JAC wow. Shocked
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Lord Jagged Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 11 2013 at 20:02
Ghost seem very interesting indeed. I will check them out.
Dead Souls In The Rear View Mirror Hitch A Ride For A While..
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Sheavy Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2013 at 19:08
Keishiro, how come Japan hogs all things awesome?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 18 2013 at 23:46
Originally posted by Lord Jagged Lord Jagged wrote:

Ghost seem very interesting indeed. I will check them out.
Hi, Paul! Thanks for your comment. Big smile

As for Ghost, let me recommend firstly Overture: Live in Nippon Yusen Soko 2006.

And of course, Masaki Batoh, the frontman of Ghost, has played very fascinatingly in his solo albums too.
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