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DamoXt7942 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 28 2009 at 08:51
Ghostly works by MASAKI BATOH come now! Clap

 Collected Works, 1995-1996 by BATOH, MASAKI album cover
Boxset/Compilation, 2004
3.00 | 1 ratings

Collected Works, 1995-1996
Masaki Batoh Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by DamoXt7942
Collaborator Psych/Space Team (Jap. Psych Specialist)

— First review of this album —
3 stars His complete works are here - you can see him with the world of life and death.

His only two solo works - A Ghost From The Darkened Sea and Kikaokubeshi - are sadly very hard for us to get in our hands. In 2004 they were reissued together by American independent label Drag City as 'Collected Works 1995-1996'. The compilation has two covers, Yoo Doo Right by CAN and World Of Pain by CREAM. Each song has Masaki's GHOSTLY style that the original one could not have, but not only this is his terrific soundscape, are you sure?

The graceful acoustic guitar solo surely shows Sham No Umi, the sea in Thailand, itself...I feel. The most beautiful and fantastic song in his works I imagine? And Spooky has lyrical sounds by xylophonic synthesizer sounds - plenty of awesome, solemn starshines there should be. Wait, I wanna say caution, please not be safe and sound here. :-)

Ebb is a short track, that is the entrance of the next song I suggest. Masaki's powerless and repetitive whispers and around them calm, transparent synth sounds - should notify you what would happen at the next moment. And in Benthos, the key DRUG of his second album, spacey and floating bashes in Masaki's inner light. Repetition of speedy synth kicks or bell hits, shots of noises sometimes attacking to you, sounds like signaling in Morse Code - all are constructing his spacey space. For you, indeed, listening hard to this song over 14 minute may be boring but I feel it's just fit for your lullaby to the dreamful space.

Okay for you to define the songs from track 7 to 9 as a story I consider. Kikaokubeshi, only 2 minute track, is not a song but exactly a collection of sounds from the lake under the inferno, with cries of a crow and feeble shouts of a dead man. I wonder if the sounds from a distance be religious bells for the dead. This track is the opening one of his second album. How do you feel if you hear such a terrible soundscape - I guess evidently on purpose he should draw you into his spiritual underground. Magakami is a funeral march made by Masaki - maybe for the pitiful dead previously mentioned - with low-toned hits of a bulky percussion, blows of a bugle, and voices reading a sutra. Weird but solemn atmosphere is around you and soon the march should go to the next stage, where the dead body is held up to the heaven. There, the sound into a trance and toward the heaven you can get, and at the same time you can join the funeral ritual together in the song. And let's go to Death Star. Here are a lot of awful and uncomfortable noises in the first half and keen, sharp-edged keyboard sounds throwing you to despair. However, just the moment the song is finished, you can come to your senses, as if you come out from a madness or a trance. What damn happened?

Tuchigumo, one of songs in his first solo work, has a flavour like the opening part of Overture by GHOST. With various percussive stuffs, strings or horns, he might squeeze his sound world out of his bound mind. He might have profound knowledge about temples, religious structures, and Buddhist stuffs because he was born in Kyoto, a Buddhist town in Japan. Also the next A Ghost From The Darkened Sea, full of religious sound structures and scattered synth puzzles with Buddhist flavour, is exactly his footprint on the rock scene. The last sound of ripple might mean the end of the life...?

Fly into the faraway sky - sink into the dark sea.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 29 2009 at 20:49
Originally posted by fusionfreak fusionfreak wrote:

Thanks for extra information Damo.I don't have the opportunity to listen to it at the moment but I'm sure it will happen,by the way is Marble Sheep awesome on stage?
Thanks fusionfreak, HANADENSHA has been added on PA library. Big smile
Please check it out! Wink
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=4684

Well Marble Sheep I'll dig out soon... Smile

And yesterday CARMEN MAKI & OZ's information and my review on the previous page was updated. Star
So happy to watch them as well. Thumbs Up
http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=58488&PID=3319599#3319599

Thanks all.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 05:31
Please listen to the eeriest Japanese heavy progressive rock! Clap



A Japanese heavy rock outfit NINGEN-ISU was formed in 1987 by Shinji Wajima (guitar, voices) and Ken'ichi Suzuki (bass, voices).
In 1989 they appeared as a bizarre project on a TV program introducing new bands and could knock all judges and audience out with their terrific technique.
As a basis shoving heavy and progressive rock style influenced by KING CRIMSON, BLACK SABBATH or BUDGIE, they have released 14 studio albums since 1990.
Their tune and lyrics are characterized by Shinji's grounding in Japanese literature or Buddhism and Ken'ichi's curiosity about doom or spiritism - the eerie and esoteric flavour gains them popularity among maniacs.



After weird and psychedelic air with sounds like an animal crying or being squeezed blowin' and twistin' around us, steady and heavy riffs by guitars and drums should come here.
The heavy riffs can remind us the sound wall by King Crimson, Uriah Heep or Rush - pioneers in heavy prog scene.
From the first track 'Tetsugoshi No Mokushiroku (The Apocalypse of Prison)' we can feel only two of their faces.
Hey folks, a bizarre show with serious plays now gets started!
'Hari No Yama (A heap of needles)' is - you bet - just Budgie's Breadfan with their Japanese impressive arrangement.
We can realize their respect for Budgie with this speedy and aggressive ensemble.
Their lyrics are very funny (Gonna fall down from the heap of needles, with my body packed with massive fire and blood!) but plays and sounds are as serious and terrific as Budgie, in my opinion as a Japanese. ;-)
For them writing lyrics should be really enjoyable we can feel.
Next 'Ayakashi No Tsuzumi (Ayakashi playin' drums)' is exactly weird song - Ayakashi is an imaginary monster in the sea, that is appeared vividly by them.
Listen and feel - like drumming in another world, heavy drum sounds with heavy bass ones and heavier voices go through our brain with weirdness of this monster.
Ken'ichi's cult make this eerie song - tasted by his eerie voices and thick sounds.
'Ringo No Namida (Tears of an apple)' is an arrangement of a Japanese children's song, isn't it?
Basically it's a song that an apple born on a countryside will go to a city by train for sale.
The children's song is pleasant and expectable one but this version is very plaintive and tragic.
I guess they should notify us the sadness of prostitutes...
'Sai No Kawara' - how shall I translate - may be from a Japanese tragic old tale.
An orphan would try to find his/her parents with piling lots of stones up but the heap of stones should collapse down - this song is the repetition of his/her act. How sad!
One of the most rhythmic and powerful love-rock song is 'Tengoku Ni Musubu Koi (Blooming love in the Heaven)'.
Shinji's naive voices are very comfortable and make us lovely, however the lyrics are very severe - yea, "SEXUAL LOVE WITH A DEAD LOVER".
Their drivin' the stream of this song is as if Robert Fripp drive...at least for me.
'Akuma No Temariuta (A devil with a ball in his hand)' is again a grotesque shot - 'bout murdered and entombed beautiful girls - the story is heavier and uglier than the sounds.
But believe me, instead of the story, they can play so literarily and seriously with their heavy progressive style, and with their native language - Tsugaru-Japanese.
And the highlight in this album - 'Ningen-shikkaku (Disqualified human life)' - is the most progressive, avantgarde, dramatic, and self-motivated song I wanna say.
This is the literary one with full of Shinji's policy. Like a movie, there are lots of scenes and stages in this song.
Life is changeable like autumn weather...? All of their faces this song has.
On the contrary, the next 'Heavy-metal No Gyakushu (Revenge of heavy-metal)' should be, for us, an enjoyable song.
'Arnheim No Izumi (Spring in Arnheim)' is produced with Shinji's graceful three-minute guitar solo.
The heavy and rumbling bomb, 'Sakura No Mori No Mankai No Sh'ta (Under full of cherry blossoms)', is very suitable for the last song of this work, in spite of this beautiful title.
Exploded riffs can let us realize they should love heavy rock, death metal, and progressive rock.
They can keep the eerie and solemn atmosphere around them till the last!

Wonderful eeeerriiee tales...recommended by eerie DamoXt7942.

Thank you for reading this blog.


Edited by DamoXt7942 - August 04 2009 at 05:33
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2009 at 18:05
Pioneer of Japanese psychedelic progressive rock! Clap

 Parallel World by FAR EAST FAMILY BAND album cover
Studio Album, 1976
4.40 | 15 ratings

Parallel World
Far East Family Band Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by DamoXt7942
Collaborator Psych/Space Team (Jap. Psych Specialist)

5 stars I wonder if this work should be an occasional product or their real answer for Japanese psychedelic rock.

Please deliberate on what I've mentioned above for listening to Japanese psychedelic rock. This Parallel World was released in 1976, just the same year (or a year later) BRAST BURN's Debon was released. Nobody knows if Debon could influence on this work or not, but Parallel World produced and mixed by Klaus Schulze (a Krautrocker) is one of the pioneers of Japanese Krautrock genre without any suspicion. Around this work, on the basis, there are dry electronic wind, chorus and voices with hoarseness, plaintive and melancholic melodies - that can remind us OKURASHOTEN (Ege Bamyasi by CAN) - shot by Fumio Miyasita or Masanori Takahashi, two multi-players. (Anyway, they've got to be famous Japanese musical healers and I consider their origin should be here.) Of course there is an exceptional song like Kokoro, with typical Japanese pop or enka flavour plus slight electronic psychedelia. However basically Metempsychosis has exotic percussive sounds with spacey electronic noises, and in the next Entering / Times, spiritual space riffs with heavy keyboard and rhythm section, following over four minute stardust chandelier. These sounds and styles should be, in my opinion, not occasional products. (For example, those by SHINKI CHEN can be called as junkie products and therefore they should be lazy and slack - ah, no doubt I feel good as well.) FAR EAST FAMILY BAND did construct them with their rigid intention and purpose...I always feel. The last suite Parallel World is absolutely suitable for the signboard of Japanese Krautrock. Strict, rhythmical and palpable sounds produced with electric guitars, keyboards, and percussion can push us into far east psychedelic scene.

There is no gloom or cloud in their strong policy for music. They should be a model of JAPAUTROCK. Okay?


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ricochet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2009 at 18:12
^ no Kitaro playing on this FEFB album? 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2009 at 18:58
Originally posted by Ricochet Ricochet wrote:

^ no Kitaro playing on this FEFB album? 
Quote
Line-up / Musicians

- Fumio Miyash*ta / guitar, keyboards, vocals
- Hirohito Fukushima / guitar
- Masanori Takahashi / keyboards
- Akira Ito / keyboards
- Akira Fukakusa / bass
- Shizuo Takasaki / drums

Recorded, produced and mixed by Klaus Schulze

In his FEFB days Masanori was not called Kitaro.
Kitaro was born after FEFB breaking up. Wink

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote honganji Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2009 at 08:14
カルメン・マキ関連だったらカルメン・マキ・アンド・サラマンドルなんかも、かなり良い出来だと思います。むしろ、私のように、かなり、アヴァン好みだと、そちらの方がすんなりは入れるかも。
それと、海外サイトで共通のエラーが発生しているのが気になります。
カルメン・マキは芸名が芸名だけに、本来はCのセクションに入れられるべきところを、本名と勘違いした海外の皆さんがマキのMに入れてしまっているという致命的なミスを犯してしまっているのが困ったところ。日本国籍のなかった時代の本名はMaki Annette Lovelace。現在は非公表。いずれにしても、Makiは英語で言えば、ファースト・ネームですからね。Mに入れるわけには行かないでしょう。Cool

P.Aでは、まだ、データベース入りしていないようですが、入れる時は細心の注意が必要です。特に、なぜCに入れなければならないか、海外の方に説明するのは難しいところですね。Ermm

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote honganji Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2009 at 08:16
人間椅子の人間失格は持っていませんね。
なるほど、少しは挑戦のしがいがあるかも。
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote honganji Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2009 at 08:23
Marble Sheepも、まだデータベースに含まれていなかったのですか?
う~~~~ん、それは、気づいていませんでした。当代屈指の日本のサイケデリック・ロック・バンドなのですが、これはどうしたものでしょうか。AMTは海外での露出度が高いため、却って日本よりはよく知られていたりしますが、Marble Sheepはその点、国内の方が明らかに知名度上。

私はロックンロール色がない、Acid Mothers Templeの方が、かなり好みです。
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ricochet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2009 at 08:27
Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

Originally posted by Ricochet Ricochet wrote:

^ no Kitaro playing on this FEFB album? 
Quote
Line-up / Musicians

- Fumio Miyash*ta / guitar, keyboards, vocals
- Hirohito Fukushima / guitar
- Masanori Takahashi / keyboards
- Akira Ito / keyboards
- Akira Fukakusa / bass
- Shizuo Takasaki / drums

Recorded, produced and mixed by Klaus Schulze

In his FEFB days Masanori was not called Kitaro.
Kitaro was born after FEFB breaking up. Wink



Learning something new. Lamp
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2009 at 11:07
Thanks honganji! Big smile
You always let me know a lot about Japanese progressive rock (if on PA or not). Clap

Your recommendations I've not heard (ah, of course ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE are my Buddha. LOL ), but almost all of them are curious for me...especially MARBLE SHEEP. Wink

If I'm interested in them, I'll take them to our psych/space team and make evaluation for addin' to PA.

Originally posted by Ricochet Ricochet wrote:

Learning something new. Lamp
So glad you could know 'bout him. Big smile
Well, however, I wanna say it's very strange such an important Japanese album should not be available now. Ouch
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote tamijo Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2009 at 03:40
Regarding, Acid Mother Temple, could you please recommand a few essential albums, seems they made a lot.
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Jon89 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2009 at 04:12
I'd start off my Acid Mother's Temple journey with a 3cd set called Do What You Want To Do, Don't Do What You Don't Want To Do. Okay so it's a best of but I think it will point you in the right direction.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2009 at 09:28
Wanna you to check this one first. Clap


Studio Album, 1999
4.74 | 6 ratings

Pataphisical Freak Out MU!!
Acid Mothers Temple Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by DamoXt7942
Skeptical Collaborator Psych/Space Team (Jap. Psych Specialist)

5 stars Freak the killa album out!

From Japan noisy space rock frontiers have come I want to say. Indeed everybody may define ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE (AMT) as Makoto Kawabata's speed guru project and it may be natural for us, but I consider this project can't work without the basis by Atsushi Tsuyama's monster bass and Hajime Koizumi's exploded and extra hard drums.

Latter of the first track Acid Takion is exactly as a one-man show of Makoto with his speedy and crazy electric violence. However, rigid rhythm battle of bass and drums must keep the guitar sound more spacey and sharp-edged.

Another interesting stuff on the album is the next track White Summer Of Love/Third Eye Of The Whole World with soft and gentle air and space. This moment should let us relaxed on the space trip.

Golden Bat Blues Dead has so bluesy style that I suggest we can be amazed at their talent. After that, suddenly Oriental Mr. Hardy Guidey Man could bring us to Astrological Overdrive, an endless highway (Eien Ni Tsuzuku Highway). :-)

Right About Rainbow I/Your My Only Super Sunshine/Right About Rainbow II is a fierce tiger called AMT waking up and chasing games. This sound is the most rampant of all songs in the work. Funky, cranky, and sticky electronic wind blows.

The last longest track Blue Velvet Blues is a masterpiece. Bluesy and depressive guitar makes a rhythm. Drumming is indeed slow and laid back but strict and serious. Then a noisy bomber's come! No, not only noisy but drowsy. Makoto seems to be terribly pleased to twist his guitar. Even keen explosion may have some meanings. Namely, this sound might shoot us away like fireworks. At the middle part, silky feminine chorus let us meditate deeply...as in a religious service. We must be absorbed in a religion by Acid Mothers TEMPLE. The latter part is for us not noisy any longer. Our bodies and minds are all broken and hoisted up over the TEMPLE and scattered in the world. At last all are over as nothing is there.

I suppose Makoto was born in Nara, Japan, where are lots of temples and idols of Buddha. He should have religious background. He could make a mixture with psychedelia and religion...

What a clever guru he is!


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote fusionfreak Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2009 at 15:44
Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

Pioneer of Japanese psychedelic progressive rock! Clap

 Parallel World by FAR EAST FAMILY BAND album cover
Studio Album, 1976
4.40 | 15 ratings

Parallel World
Far East Family Band Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by DamoXt7942
Collaborator Psych/Space Team (Jap. Psych Specialist)

5 stars I wonder if this work should be an occasional product or their real answer for Japanese psychedelic rock.

Please deliberate on what I've mentioned above for listening to Japanese psychedelic rock. This Parallel World was released in 1976, just the same year (or a year later) BRAST BURN's Debon was released. Nobody knows if Debon could influence on this work or not, but Parallel World produced and mixed by Klaus Schulze (a Krautrocker) is one of the pioneers of Japanese Krautrock genre without any suspicion. Around this work, on the basis, there are dry electronic wind, chorus and voices with hoarseness, plaintive and melancholic melodies - that can remind us OKURASHOTEN (Ege Bamyasi by CAN) - shot by Fumio Miyasita or Masanori Takahashi, two multi-players. (Anyway, they've got to be famous Japanese musical healers and I consider their origin should be here.) Of course there is an exceptional song like Kokoro, with typical Japanese pop or enka flavour plus slight electronic psychedelia. However basically Metempsychosis has exotic percussive sounds with spacey electronic noises, and in the next Entering / Times, spiritual space riffs with heavy keyboard and rhythm section, following over four minute stardust chandelier. These sounds and styles should be, in my opinion, not occasional products. (For example, those by SHINKI CHEN can be called as junkie products and therefore they should be lazy and slack - ah, no doubt I feel good as well.) FAR EAST FAMILY BAND did construct them with their rigid intention and purpose...I always feel. The last suite Parallel World is absolutely suitable for the signboard of Japanese Krautrock. Strict, rhythmical and palpable sounds produced with electric guitars, keyboards, and percussion can push us into far east psychedelic scene.

There is no gloom or cloud in their strong policy for music. They should be a model of JAPAUTROCK. Okay?


OK!ClapThumbs UpClapApprove Damo!!!!!
I was born in the land of Mahavishnu,not so far from Kobaia.I'm looking for the world

of searchers with the help from

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2009 at 09:55
Thanks fusionfreak for your recommendation of MARBLE SHEEP - they come here now! Clap



MARBLE SHEEP were formed around Ken Matsutani (guitar, voices), who is the representative director of Captain Trip Records. On July 1, 1987 they made their debut on stage of "Yaneura" in Tokyo, under the name of Marble Sheep & The Run-down Sun's Children. In early days, they made lots of gigs with enthusiasm in spite of their line-up instability. Many cassette albums with the gigs released one after another could make not only audience but reviewers and listeners get excited. Their musical style is heavy, psychedelic and spacey rock like Minimal Music, and much influenced by American Psych Rock like Grateful Dead and Krautrock. But by their line-up instability, repeated trial and error, they fell suspended in 1994.

After several year hibernation, they were born again as MARBLE SHEEP. They emphasized the colour of Space Punk Rock with twin drums and twin guitars, and extensively made gigs around the world. From 2001 they released five albums with stoner psychedelic punk style and have reached the peak of their popularity. Current members are Ken (guitar, voices), Zigen (guitar), Iwamotor (drums), and Baby (bass) with a support drummer Tarou. They say in the official website, "In contrast with the long history of the band, Marble Sheep are described as Merry Pranksters of the 21st Century." That's it!


Message From Oarfish (2007)

From beginning to finish, loud, fuzzy guitar"s" sounds and thick, heavy drum"s" kicks run around and over our brain!

The longest first track Tears has remarkably exploded power with a lump of heavy, stoner, psychedelic rock kaleidoscope. Their force with enthusiasm can let us go wilder and mad. Their voices are not refined but enjoyable to move us into the psychedelia. And Rie's bass - hidden by the brilliant loud instruments - can absoutely keep the whole outfit steady. I feel all players should be not well-poilished but their muddy atmosphere can intensify the passion of sound to a high degree. The style reminds us the persistence of Shinki Chen's projects or stickily psychedelic loudness of Acid Mothers Temple. The members in this album are Ken, Zigen, Iwamotor, and Sawada (drums), Rie (bass), all of who are gone away to another world with their serious plays.

I consider this wonderful work should be one of the most important ones in not only Japanese but also worldwide psychedelic rock scene.

Thank you for reading this blog.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2009 at 09:05

Live, 1972
4.67 | 3 ratings 
July 15, 1972
Taj-Mahal Travellers Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by DamoXt7942
Collaborator Psych/Space Team (Jap. Psych Specialist)

5 stars Very mysterious and curious for me - always wonder where they should go toward on stage. Fusion with audience? Or mergence into the space?

In the first track Takehisa's keen and sharp-edged violin solo and warm harmonica sounds with Tokio's utterly messy jazzy drumming might strike the audience under the ground deeply. Very interesting each of their instrumental shots should go on his own way but the space should be so far from the word "loose" or "sloppy". Over 25 minutes will rush away over our brain - be immersed absolutely. And the second track is certainly shouts from the inferno...electronic earthquake can shake and break us into pieces. Such a sticky and persistent attack is surely their shout of mind, I always feel. Painful sounds. The last twisted and twittered violin missile attacks can make us more and more nauseously comfortable like cannabis. If you listen to the track on takin' a drive, you must get carsick...anesthetic carsick. And at last, you have to die out by an iron board beaten strongly and loudly!


Yes they are, as the band name says, travellers in the musical space. Indeed each member had quite different character, position and opinion for music from the others, but could push his musical style toward the others and all are well-melted and matured. Amazingly, Takehisa's violin solo navigated the band itself across the sea named "the stage" and NO other member followed the navigator - each should play as he liked LOL. However, they were wondrous harmonized completely together! Basically on stage they always tried to go for free-formed but well-balanced music and space. It's exactly beyond expression that they could construct and concentrate "three song world(s)" strictly in spite of simple but scattered and confused stuffs in the beginning.

Please enjoy the "space" travel, a Japanese pride! Anaesthetically recommended by DamoXt7942.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2009 at 02:09
Folks, please lean against this electro-analogue spark by HOSOME! Clap



HOSOME were formed as a four-piece outfit in Osaka, Japan in 2007 by Hayato Nakajima(guitars, voices), Yoshifumi Kuwano(bass), Shikiko Osawa(keyboards, voices), and Ryohei Toda(drums, percussion). Their musical style is, in a phrase, progressive hybrid rock with electronically avantgarde, industrially noisy, and pleasantly analogue one. Through some gigs and much experience all around Japan, HOSOME dropped their debut bomb "New Fascio" simultaneously in the U.S., Europe, and Japan on December 12th, 2007 - that could absorb many fans and reviewers into HOSOMIC stomach. The stage is like a toy box, and the four players always pop up from the stage and amaze the audience like toy soldiers. Keeping their activity full, HOSOME released the second work "Jakamashi Jazz" ornamented with more twinkling stars on September 9th, 2009.



LISTEN TO THE JAKAMASHI JAZZ WITH FULL VOLUME...AND BREAK AWAY.

Their musical style is like a bowl of rice with various toppings. Yup, you can feel so with listening to the first track. Lots of electronic noises and sounds can attack and immerse you into the deep rice. Furthermore, they can play more speedy than AxCx!...hahaha, kiddin'. :-P
As plenty of rubbish (sorry!) flow from the upper side of a river, they can squeeze plenty of noises into your ears and brain. Whatever they do, Hayato's lyrics are hard for you to hear and realize, and their rhythm kaleidoscope is difficult for you to follow completely. (Not kiddin'!)
I guess they might not well reckon how the sounds should go - however, the sounds can directly and naturally flow into your brain - this phenomenon is exactly beyond expression. I've watched their stage (and bought this album) and felt as well - Hayato's spelling (!) and their play both were very loud, quick and absurd. Wait wait very exciting and enthusiastic! His sweat and spit flew around us in front of the audience, and the keyboardist Shikiko hopped and jumped on the stage with playing - as a pretty toy pop up from a toy box.
I consider the important point is, they can add their analogue elements on the digital basis. Believe me, their style and sounds are not well polished - because of their ground-smelled action and anarchy. Consequently, I cannot call them simply an electronic rock outfit but a mixed hybrid one.

Listen and laugh out loudly, recommended.

Thank you for reading this blog. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2009 at 02:49
Originally posted by honganji honganji wrote:

Marble Sheep...

Honganji, MARBLE SHEEP has been added in Psychedelic/Space Rock library some weeks before. Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Raff Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2009 at 06:51
I am very happy to finally be able to participate in this thread, since in the past couple of months I have got to know a few excellent Japanese bands - some of whom haven't yet been added to the PA database. I know Keishiro is a big fan of Asturias, and I'm glad to say that their latest release, In Search of the Soul Trees, is an excellent album that was a real pleasure for me to listen and review. Another find was Fantasmagoria's Day and Night - the band is led by violinist Miki Fujimoto (a woman), and they are a wonderful example of violin-led instrumental prog. They are not yet on PA, but I'll be happy to submit them for addition as soon as I decide which subgenre is best.

I also have CDs by TEE and Qui waiting to be reviewed. The first impression of both was very good, but I need more listens in order to actually 'get' the album. Qui played at ProgDay last week, and I read some very positive comments about them. Anyway, I will post a link to my reviews of Japanese bands here, if no one minds the shameless plugWink.
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