Japanese Progressive Rock presented by DamoX |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Thanks Raff for your recommendation and warm comments.
I love TEE's colourful sounds featuring sharpedged and passionate flute solo. Someday gonna introduce them here... |
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Kazuhiro
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 14 2009 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 1336 |
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maxiepad2000
Forum Newbie Joined: March 25 2009 Location: Prairie Village Status: Offline Points: 3 |
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I was browsing around a very large list of stoner rock from this one website and decided to test my luck and pick and album at random to explore. I picked an album by the band MARBLE SHEEP called "For Demolition Of A Spiritual Framework". REALLY loved it. Nobody on progarchives has posted a review on this album yet so I'm guessing not very many people have heard of these guys yet.
I'm one of those listeners who explores prog country by country as opposed to by genre. I just got through a Latin American prog phase and this Japanese stuff is really starting to catch on. Great thread!!
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maxiepad2000
Forum Newbie Joined: March 25 2009 Location: Prairie Village Status: Offline Points: 3 |
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b_olariu
Prog Reviewer Joined: March 02 2007 Location: Romania Status: Offline Points: 5532 |
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Why doesn't anyone talks about Dja Vu - Baroque int he future - 1988, one of the best japanese bands and albums I ever heared.
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lucas
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 06 2004 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 8138 |
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I don't know if it qualifies, but the japanese experimental/noise/hardcore band melt banana released some interesting albums, among which 'charlie', which should appeal to progsters.
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"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Thanks maxiepad2000, b_olariu, and lucas!
MARBLE SHEEP was added in ProgArchives library only a month ago. Indeed Japanese psychedelic scene from LES RALLIZES DENUDES or FLOWER TRAVELLIN' BAND, or for another approach TAJ-MAHAL TRAVELLERS is our pride I wanna say. I'm very very happy you can listen to other Japanese psych artists' works if you like.
The answer is easy - Deja-Vu's Baroque In The Future is currently almost unavailable all over the world, I suppose. However I'm very lucky to get this album a while later! Sooner I'll drop my humble review here, please check it out! ;-)
Shamefully I've not known about Melt Banana (= MxBx)...but Japanese noise outfit mimicking AxCx? Honestly I'm an AxCx freak hahahaha... |
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mithrandir
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 25 2006 Location: New Mexico Status: Offline Points: 933 |
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I absolutely love ROVO, completely underrated IMO, sadly most of their material is nearly impossible to get stateside
Mutyumu, is another great new band |
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honganji
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 21 2005 Status: Offline Points: 571 |
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Mutyumu is very great. Ilya is the 2nd favorite Japanese prog album I bought in this one year between September 2008 and September 2009. (No.1 is ExhiVision / Beyond The Earthbound)
Recent additions into my Japanese albums collection: Acid Mothers Temple & Melting Paraiso U.F.O. / Are We Experimental? 岸倫仔 (Kishi Linnko) / Go Places! Linnko! 星連船バンド (Seirensen Band) / S.T. Kishi Linnko's 4th album is the best for me. In comparison with previous 3 albums, it is less oriented jazz rock. Also it may be the calmest album among all 4 albums. ということで、DamoXさんも、機会がありましたら岸倫仔さんをどうぞ~。 まだ、PAには女性のソロ・バイオリニストはエントリーされていないはずです。男性のバイオリニストはいるはずですが(ああ、面倒くさがってデータベースに戻ろうとしていないし・・・・)、女性となるとプログレ界でも珍しいですからね。金子飛鳥さんよりも、まずは岸倫仔さんが入門にもいいかな?
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Oh, thanks mithrandir!
Yea, I think 'Condor' is a dramatic and visualized album...my love. 'NUOU' is a bit weaker...Yuji's violin is crazy and strong, though.
honganji, your comments always make me happy. Linnko, as kazuhiro has recommended here, I've listened and been amazed. Her eccentrically jazzy taste with Oriental spice is indeed great. |
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mithrandir
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 25 2006 Location: New Mexico Status: Offline Points: 933 |
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not sure what my favorite is, Mon is excellent as well as Imago, and Tonic 2001 was the first one I had, I also have Live at Hibiya Yaon, which is another excellent live 2CD, I haven't heard much of the latest one yet, all their albums are soaring though! |
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Kazuhiro
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 14 2009 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 1336 |
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honganji
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 21 2005 Status: Offline Points: 571 |
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Kazuhiro
Prog Reviewer Joined: January 14 2009 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 1336 |
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This is sold only with DVD. And, I do not have this DVD. I will buy it can the purchase of it.
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BaronVonCruzer
Forum Newbie Joined: February 27 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 26 |
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I'm a huge ELP fan. So, I like the Made In Japan roster of artists, since almost all of them are heavily influenced by ELP as well other keyboard-led classic Prog bands like Goblin, Balleto Di Bronzo, etc.
My favorites are Ars Nova, Gerard, and Teru's Symphonia. Teru's is the least ELP-like of those three since they're led by a guitarist (guess what his name is), but they're still ELP influenced. Other bands I have: Bellaphon, Deja Vu, Social Tension, Happy Family.
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THE PROG REPORT
The Progressive Rock Fan's Guide To The iPod Revolution www.theprogreport.com |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Seconded, BaronVonCruzer!
Particularly ELP has much influence on Japanese three-piece progressive bands including a keyboardist, a guitarist, and a bassist...as you've said, such as in Made In Japan label. |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Two Japanese psychedelic pioneers - one is King of Japanese psych, and another is fantastic novelty...but both have suspended their activity...
Studio Album, 1991 5.00 | 1 ratings '77 Live Les Rallizes Denudes Psychedelic/Space Rock
Review by
DamoXt7942
— First review of this album —
Please listen to this album and be too surprised to say a word.
You cannot close your eyes and mouth - also I've been very surprised at my first try for this album. As follows, there are three points I would like to emphasize here: 1) Basically Takashi MIZUTANI's enthusiastic, tasteful, and fragile (sometimes madly exploded) electric guitar solo can take the initiative to drive the outfit as a basis. I feel he might particularly use neither eccentric phrases nor technical variations, but simple and laidback psychedelic riffs on his play. His strong policy and intention might immerse the audience deeply into his psychedelia, with simple and comfortable phrase repetitions by his 'numbing' guitar solo. 2) There is no suspicion that his 'electric heavyland' should have a bulky influence on the next generation bands such as Acid Mothers Temple. However, his remarkably different point from the younger players is that I can catch a glimpse of his 'junkie' smile in his loudly heavy earthquake. Namely, he could play loudly but with relaxation, not with scattering sweat and spit - such an atmosphere most of the novel psychedelic outfits cannot carry on, in my opinion. 3) Takashi's songs and voices are as awful as of a drunken guy in a cheap karaoke bar - as if I should be knocked out by sour and perfume smell over a matured whisky. Ah, sorry that I've used blatant words but, contrary to above mentioned, such a cheesy vocal might add some droning, hypnotic spice on their guitar-based psychedelia. Who knows what a poor stuff should get much impressive, and at least about them, who cares his voices be fishy - let me say how wonderful the ensemble should be, in spite of his voices. Regretfully it's not easy for lots of psychedelic rock fans to get this album but so glad and happy if you can get and listen to the album with this point of view on the corner of your brain. Well such a theoretical issue aside, let's enjoy this terrific album - you may feel the sound
quality should be terribly crude, but this crudeness must push and kick you over the cliff named
'the real world'.
'Listen!' Takashi Mizutani's loudly growlin' and trailin' guitar solo would give us such a
suggestive shout, and you will get happy with LES RALLIZES DENUDES' junkie and freaky intoxication
around you - splendid time is guaranteed for all! Studio Album, 2005 4.00 | 1 ratings City Calls Revolution Green Milk From The Planet Orange Psychedelic/Space Rock Review by
DamoXt7942
— First review of this album —
Let me say - for me, there are two sorts of psychedelic progressive rock. One is what I listen to
for some comfort or relaxed mind, and another is for getting more active and more powerful - a
musical charger as it is said.
GREEN MILK FROM THE PLANET ORANGE, a power play, is of course the latter.
As said about Jaapnese psychedelic bands, GREEN MILK FROM THE PLANET ORANGE's musical style on City Calls Revolution is the garage rock flavour of MARBLE SHEEP blended with the spacey innovation of ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE. Aside from just the beginning of the first track Concrete City Breakdown, mellow and hypnotic spelling of a keyboard solo, here is exactly a lump of fuzzy, noisy, hardy guitar and active, aggressive, cumulative drums and percussion. Obsucure voices and whispers and shouts can make their sounds more violent and more incoherent - sorry that I cannot understand Dead K's voices, not only English words but Japanese ones, but his voices should be a real violent instrument itself, especially the Japanese shouts like a leftist movement or proclamation in the latter part of the Concrete City Breakdown. Who cares what they said in the track - everything active, everything powerful, and everything violent is okay for us 'depressed listeners'. (Um, in this sense, the beginning of fragile keyboard sounds would be heard like an weird opening act. ) OMGS is characterized by an intense battle between a speedy guitar and strengthened drums. Fiercely terribly terrific with violent shouts added! Demagog is exactly a psychedelic grind core as from Earache label. And, contrary to the previous tracks, the longest laidback jam session A Day in the Planet Orange gets started unnoticed. Slowly stoner / shoegaze and strongly persistent riffs by all instruments including crazy chorus are immediately erosive and comfortably itchy bitchy. An earachy and deeply dignified guitar solo in the second third of the track should be kickin' knockin' us "tired listeners" and makin' us active and aggressive immediately. The last third part is, I consider, surely "lingering imagery" or "subtle overtones" with exploded violence once again at last. Why don't we get powerful and intensive with bein' immersed by this volcanic work? Sadly, absolutely sadly, GREEN MILK FROM THE PLANET ORANGE has suspended their activity - we may not gain their power anymore. Edited by DamoXt7942 - October 02 2009 at 04:16 |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Finnforest
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Offline Points: 16913 |
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Cool, have fun tomorrow Damo!!
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Yesterday Kazuhiro and I could make a short but warm rendezvous in a Shochu bar near Shinagawa Station, Tokyo. Many many discussions about progressive rock scene and ProgArchives we had - oh, of course, RPI Specialist Prof. Finny came up in our discussion. We two could reach an agreement on suggesting more and more progressive artists we know to PA Specialists. Sooner he and I will get more active here hahahaha. |
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