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Japanese Progressive Rock presented by DamoX

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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: January 04 2011 at 17:48
Originally posted by SaltyJon SaltyJon wrote:

I noticed that in your description above.  Does the Soft Machine resemblance go farther than the album art and band name? Wink
Wow, I've NOT noticed that ... you bet, exactly. Embarrassed
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 04 2011 at 17:52
Anyway, Mammal Machine have already invaded into Psych / Space space.
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=6104
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SaltyJon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 04 2011 at 17:54
Cool stuff - I'll have to give them a listen sometime. Thumbs Up

I just listened to Altered States' album 4 while doing some housework...they're always great fun as well.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2011 at 02:57
Yumi Hara Cawkwell has come here, and sent me a Private Mail with her appreciation for our addition and reviews. 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: January 20 2011 at 03:22
As previously mentioned, Yumi Hara Cawkwell (Mammal Machine) has sent me her lovely Private Mail. Big smile
One of her projects HUMI ... with Hugh HOPPER ... let me recommend them today. Cool


HUMI - the experimental music project formed by Hugh HOPPER and Yumi Hara CAWKWELL

HUMI were a short-lived two-piece experimental music project, formed by Hugh HOPPER (bass, loops, electronics; ex-Soft Machine) and Yumi Hara CAWKWELL (voices, keyboards, percussion) - they came across in August 2007 and made an immediate and intuitive decision to start a novel project. In the following year they released their debut (and only one) album 'Dune', and drew up a plan to go on a tour all around the world with this creation. However, this dreamy tour could not complete since Hugh fell into leukemia. And sadly, this 'Dune' had got to be Hugh's last studio work.


Dune (2008) - HUMI
(This album has been recommended here by Assaf Vestin. Thanks Assaf! Clap )

HUMI were a "short-lived" (very sadly for all fans ... the reason is well-known though) two-piece experimental music project, formed by Hugh HOPPER (bass, loops, electronics; ex-Soft Machine) and Yumi HARA CAWKWELL (voices, keyboards, percussion) in 2007. They released one (and only) album "Dune" in 2008 via Moonjune Records, that could be crystallized with two tremendous talents for uncivilized strange experimental music scene. They could have gone on a tour all around the world along with this fascinating album, but very sadly this (dreamy dream) tour could not complete because of Hugh's illness (leukemia), and this "Dune" had got to be his last studio creation. We can feel his magnificent scale via this work obviously.

Amazingly, this is HUMI's creation, not Hugh & Yumi's one. That is, in all songs of this album, not that one player plays with supporting another, but with stimulating another like an actress / actor upon a theatre stage or in a movie screen, let me say. Yumi's terrific keyboard play and mysterious, unexampled voices, Hugh's deep bass and refined electronic sounds throughout the whole production can be approved by almost all reviewers, and furthermore, this album notifies me how important an actress / actor can show and tell her / his play depending on the situation or atmosphere.

Taking the second track "Shiranui" for example ... Shiranui is a Japanese monster or illusory phenomenon (Sea Fire ... the subtitle of this song) that may be brought by the monster everyone says, and we can easily feel such an eerie air via Hugh's weird synthesizer shots and Yumi's scattered but graceful piano touches. But at least for me, in this song Yumi's piano sounds like a pretty girl playing with pleasure upon an extensive and ruined dune produced by Hugh's magnificence. Extremely more obvious in the three-piece "Dune" suite - Hugh's heavy, deep bass kicks can be compared to the huge desert, his weird elektronika to sand stirred up by a wind, and Yumi's keyboard sounds to stardust, and her voices to hot, dry, but mysteriously comfortable air over the dune ... in my mind.

Let me emphasize, Yumi's play is very eclectic and colourful ... wearing a sensual expression in "Hopeful Impressions Of Happiness", a serious and solemn one like a shrine maiden in "Seki No Gohonmatsu" (in Izumo, Japan ... anyway), dark green wind-blowing (very tough and painful) in "Scattered Forest", large drops of snow falling onto Hugh's eccentric rocky tract "Awayuki". And yeah, I love especially the last track "Futa", where all (both Hugh's and Yumi's plays) should be well-broken and scattered into piece ... addictive psychedelia beyond expression. Always stimulating each other aggressively ... this is the most important and impressive point on HUMI.

Kudos for them, and the late Hugh.



Seki No Gohonmatsu performed by HUMI


Thank you for reading this blog. ٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Eetu Pellonpaa Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2011 at 09:13
^^ Impressive and innovating writings, I rejoice your happiness and devotion to share information of this interesting music you have found Hug

Edited by Eetu Pellonpää - January 20 2011 at 09:13
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2011 at 17:22
So glad you can understand my happiness, Eetu ... Heart
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 26 2011 at 02:32
Another Masahiko Satoh’s (See The Soundbreakers and New Herd / Masahiko Satoh) terrific project, let me recommend today. Cool


“Dema” Project … Yasutaka TSUTSUI / Kohsuke ICHIHARA / Masahiko SATOH

This “Dema” Project got started with Kohsuke ICHIHARA's occasional idea - Kohsuke had been much immersed in a short novel titled Dema, written by Yasutaka TSUTSUI, and he brought this novel to Masahiko SATOH for persuading him to product a suite for Dema story … also Masahiko got interested in this project and composed some material for it. In 1973 Kohsuke ICHIHARA All Stars and Masahiko SATOH & Garandoh came together for the sake of a music novel called ‘Dema’, that was released via a Japanese big major record label CBS / Sony (and re-released as a CD album via Disk Union, a Japanese CD distributor).


Dema (1973) - YASUTAKA TSUTSUI / KOHSUKE ICHIHARA / MASAHIKO SATOH

Another Masahiko SATOH's gem released in 1973 ... very surprising that CBS / Sony, a Japanese big major record label, could make an excellent decision to shoot such an aggressive progressive album at that moment.

As their biography says, the "bizarre" project had started over Kohsuke's curiosity about Yasutaka's novel named "Dema (Rumours)". I have not read this novel yet (for the reason that I'm afraid I have something of preconception or bias toward this album) but such a painful tension via this album can be enough for us to realize where the original story goes. The short opening "Prologue" is a quiet omen, with weird synthesizer sounds, percussive rumbles, dark guitar bazookas. And the tensive basis cannot be altered upon the following stage "Information 1 - Information 22" ... Cool but burning keyboard sound-fire, dry and achy flute knife edge suddenly attack against our ears, as if a terrible alien with dreadful weapons would run around here and there under the dark sky. And furthermore, in the middle part the riffs pick upper-tempo, just like an activity of the strange murderer (actually, this novel can go ahead as this, can't it?) Until the very last of the track, we cannot avoid chilling by the burning keyboard iceberg and sharp-edged & self-assertive bass explosion ... but amazingly comfortable in such a refined air.

In the next scene "Information 23 - Information 49", this aggressiveness gets more extensive ... quiet piano, scattered saxophones and flute, ethnic but not simple (remarkably complex) percussion ... all instruments come and attack against our brain as though they should lie next by next on top of each other upon this stage. Just when a noisy synthesizer sound darkness comes here, we listeners (and also the players?) can do nothing about this "rumour" finally ... Under serious and cynical loudness, psychedelic piano, sharp-edged violin, avantgarde loud saxophones, fuzzy messy bass assertion, and synthesizer darkness - all popped up and invade easily into our mind that expand more easily. Upon the last track "Epilogue", there's nothing except vacant atmosphere, which can be made by plaintive synthesizer streams and sad string eyes.

Indeed, enough for us to feel the novel vividly. Recommended as a newly-formatted novel.


The inner sleeve of Dema … very psychedelic, avantgarde!


Thank you for reading this blog. ٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 03 2011 at 05:42

Today let me suggest another Yumi Hara Cawkwell's project ... GEOFF LEIGH & YUMI HARA. Cool

Listened to their limited live album "Riverhead" (2009). Glad this album sent to me has a limited number yay! LOL

Collaboration? No. Engagement in music battle between Geoff and Yumi ... it's obviously natural because both have strong personality and sharp-edged intention for "music".

Each player seems to pick a music battle with the other one ... in every song. That is, each player might try so hard to release the best sound bomb for the atmosphere around them upon the other, that both of them could not get beaten at all. A lump of sound bombs shot via two fantastic sound launchers can get entangled and well-united, refined for the air among stage and audience. Another impressive matter for me is, that their music approaches sound different from each other. Geoff played, as a multi-instrumental player, various appearances with various instruments (according to the credit upon the sleeve, he played flute, soprano sax, percussion, nose flute / voice drone, electronics), and contrary to that, Yumi played various appearances (same as Geoff) with her voices and keyboards only. Sorry for my ignorance in music theory but lots of music faces popping out of then, and their expression manners on stage impress me so much that I cannot help analyzing every single sound through their instruments and bodies (don't know whether my way to listen should be right or not, though).


Riverhead (Japan Tour 2009 Limited Edition) - GEOFF LEIGH & YUMI HARA

Analysis aside, can feel atmosphere tense with aggressiveness and comfort (simultaneously both of which can exist on stage, mysterious situation) in the former 4 tracks of this album ... those were recorded on stage in London. Let me emphasize what a chilling tension and heart-warmed wind stream can live together. Guess they might play harder and harder for squeezing the most suitable sound for the stage and the air out of their minds and bodies (including instruments they played), but not all of the end products received by the audience should be hard mass really. Some hard sounds can change themselves into hearty sound bubbles in front of the audience I imagine. As for the latter 3 tracks recorded in studio, we can consider similarly to the live performance, can't we? These can be mentioned as battles between them (in Japan this battle may be done as a battle with serious swords ... surely their sounds all can be sharp for cutting our mind), and the end products (aka songs) can get well-refined and much merged enough together. Yumi's keyboard solo can be sometimes gracious, sometimes weird, sometimes delightful, and sometimes serious ... wonder how she can exert so various appearances only via a keyboard (or an organ). And wow, also Geoff's flute is awesome, with aggressive kicks and easygoing whispers ... perfect dissociative faces he has definitely.



Previously Yumi told me that musicians should try hard to create the best (for the air) sound one by one without thinking anything else, and only the audience can cultivate the end creation (combination of sounds, aka a song) wonderfully ... got it!


Thank you for reading this blog. ٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Anthony H. Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 05 2011 at 13:39
Speaking of Yasutaka Tsutsui, Salmonella Men on Planet Porno is a fantastic collection of short stories. I highly recommend it.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 05 2011 at 23:06
Originally posted by Anthony H. Anthony H. wrote:

Speaking of Yasutaka Tsutsui, Salmonella Men on Planet Porno is a fantastic collection of short stories. I highly recommend it.
Thanks Anthony! I'll check it soon (a bit difficult to search such a short novel though Cry Not found his "Dema" yet Dead ).
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Rivertree Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 07 2011 at 14:22
Hey, Keishiro, are you aware of the project VAMPILLIA?



They describe themselves as a 10 piece “brutal orchestra” and turn classical into hardcore music. Three distinct vocalists backed by twin violins, piano, twin guitars, bass, turntables. Toyohito Yoshikawa (ex Boredoms) and Kazuhisa Chikada (World’s End Girlfriend) on drums as well as Tatsuya Yoshida .

I could listen to their new 'Alchemic Heart' album and hear massive post rock guitar walls, doom, drones, shoegaze, exccentrical vocals - experimental, melancholic  ... hard to digest


http://vampillia.com/alcemicheart.jpg



Edited by Rivertree - February 07 2011 at 14:23


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 07 2011 at 16:58
Originally posted by Rivertree Rivertree wrote:

Hey, Keishiro, are you aware of the project VAMPILLIA?



They describe themselves as a 10 piece “brutal orchestra” and turn classical into hardcore music. Three distinct vocalists backed by twin violins, piano, twin guitars, bass, turntables. Toyohito Yoshikawa (ex Boredoms) and Kazuhisa Chikada (World’s End Girlfriend) on drums as well as Tatsuya Yoshida .

I could listen to their new 'Alchemic Heart' album and hear massive post rock guitar walls, doom, drones, shoegaze, exccentrical vocals - experimental, melancholic  ... hard to digest


http://vampillia.com/alcemicheart.jpg

Ouhoh, a new bizarre ... thanks Uwe for your recommendation with PAINFUL appearance and beats. LOL

I'll check them ASAP.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SaltyJon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 07 2011 at 18:26
Tatsuya Yoshida you say?  I'm intrigued. Big smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote snobb Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 08 2011 at 06:38
Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

Another Masahiko Satoh’s (See The Soundbreakers and New Herd / Masahiko Satoh) terrific project, let me recommend today. Cool“Dema” Project … Yasutaka TSUTSUI / Kohsuke ICHIHARA / Masahiko SATOHThis “Dema” Project got started with Kohsuke ICHIHARA's occasional idea - Kohsuke had been much immersed in a short novel titled Dema, written by Yasutaka TSUTSUI, and he brought this novel to Masahiko SATOH for persuading him to product a suite for Dema story … also Masahiko got interested in this project and composed some material for it. In 1973 Kohsuke ICHIHARA All Stars and Masahiko SATOH & Garandoh came together for the sake of a music novel called ‘Dema’, that was released via a Japanese big major record label CBS / Sony (and re-released as a CD album via Disk Union, a Japanese CD distributor).Dema (1973) - YASUTAKA TSUTSUI / KOHSUKE ICHIHARA / MASAHIKO SATOHAnother Masahiko SATOH's gem released in 1973 ... very surprising that CBS / Sony, a Japanese big major record label, could make an excellent decision to shoot such an aggressive progressive album at that moment.As their biography says, the "bizarre" project had started over Kohsuke's curiosity about Yasutaka's novel named "Dema (Rumours)". I have not read this novel yet (for the reason that I'm afraid I have something of preconception or bias toward this album) but such a painful tension via this album can be enough for us to realize where the original story goes. The short opening "Prologue" is a quiet omen, with weird synthesizer sounds, percussive rumbles, dark guitar bazookas. And the tensive basis cannot be altered upon the following stage "Information 1 - Information 22" ... Cool but burning keyboard sound-fire, dry and achy flute knife edge suddenly attack against our ears, as if a terrible alien with dreadful weapons would run around here and there under the dark sky. And furthermore, in the middle part the riffs pick upper-tempo, just like an activity of the strange murderer (actually, this novel can go ahead as this, can't it?) Until the very last of the track, we cannot avoid chilling by the burning keyboard iceberg and sharp-edged & self-assertive bass explosion ... but amazingly comfortable in such a refined air.In the next scene "Information 23 - Information 49", this aggressiveness gets more extensive ... quiet piano, scattered saxophones and flute, ethnic but not simple (remarkably complex) percussion ... all instruments come and attack against our brain as though they should lie next by next on top of each other upon this stage. Just when a noisy synthesizer sound darkness comes here, we listeners (and also the players?) can do nothing about this "rumour" finally ... Under serious and cynical loudness, psychedelic piano, sharp-edged violin, avantgarde loud saxophones, fuzzy messy bass assertion, and synthesizer darkness - all popped up and invade easily into our mind that expand more easily. Upon the last track "Epilogue", there's nothing except vacant atmosphere, which can be made by plaintive synthesizer streams and sad string eyes.Indeed, enough for us to feel the novel vividly. Recommended as a newly-formatted novel.The inner sleeve of Dema … very psychedelic, avantgarde!Thank you for reading this blog. ٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶



Really interesting experimental music, possibly more on free-jazz side
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 08 2011 at 17:26
Originally posted by SaltyJon SaltyJon wrote:

Tatsuya Yoshida you say?  I'm intrigued. Big smile
Of course Jon! Clap
Anyway, Yumi Hara Cawkwell has said that she will go on a tour in Japan with collaboration from Tatsuya and Hoppy (Kamiyama) ... maybe this summer. Cool
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 08 2011 at 17:28
Originally posted by snobb snobb wrote:

Really interesting experimental music, possibly more on free-jazz side
And they played definite Rock, anybody could not have done in those days.

Thanks Slava for your appreciation. Big smile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SaltyJon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 08 2011 at 18:28
Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

Originally posted by SaltyJon SaltyJon wrote:

Tatsuya Yoshida you say?  I'm intrigued. Big smile
Of course Jon! Clap
Anyway, Yumi Hara Cawkwell has said that she will go on a tour in Japan with collaboration from Tatsuya and Hoppy (Kamiyama) ... maybe this summer. Cool

Ooh, that would be great!  I love everything I've heard from Hoppy so far as well, a very unique performer for sure.  What little I've heard from Yumi Hara Cawkwell has been good too.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 09 2011 at 02:52
Let me post my review about the tremendous (expected) stage here. 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 21 2011 at 04:25
Here's come DJAMRA's new album "Dai-Circus (Circle Of Circus)"!



DJAMRA plays an Osakan Drama.

This "Circle Of Circus" is DJAMRA's fourth album, that can notify me they can create and produce this stuff with more relaxed, and with more objective soundscape ... through this objectiveness we can find them growin' up as performers and simultaneously as Osakan Entertainers ... let me emphasize. Namely, there are some tracks (for example, the sixth "Assasin In Sin", the eighth "Komurakaeri", or the tenth "Nest") rehashed their standard numbers previously released or played, and DJAMRA could "easily and comfortably" play complex and eccentric phrases in all of them. And surprisingly, each and every standard should not be out of harmony with the other songs and this theme "Circle Of Circus" itself. Guess they can clarify the proverb that the Osakan people can reuse and reissue old stuffs most cleverly of all Japanese?


Circle Of Circus (2010) - DJAMRA

Each song has a definite and obvious appearance for what DJAMRA should try to express. A Pierrot (le fou) or a dancer sometimes walks on the stage, sometimes dances with a tiger, sometimes (always?) gives a joke, and sometimes plays a dangerous stunt ... all matters can be expressed much skillfully, as a very amazing show. I'm sure both the players and the audience (that is, the songs) sometimes laugh out loudly, sometimes cry against danger, and sometimes palpitate, get excited & jump up as though they could be racing drivers. This story may be less "catchy" than the previous album indeed methinks, but should be more fascinating and more united, more refined surely ... based on their attitude for a rock suite I imagine.

I’m much immersed especially in the second track “Pierrot's Foot Goes Into Convulsions” and thirteenth “Civilization”. “Pierrot’s … “ is the rehash of their repertoire on stage “Nagashiuchi” and amazingly they can play so easily such complex phrases. From the very opening - completely along with the rhythm section by Masaharu & Akihiro - Akira’s keen guitar, Takehiro’s brilliant keyboard, and Shinji’s funky-punky alto saxophone can go ahead aggressively and strictly. Playing a complicated and eccentric tune may give a convulsion to their body indeed, but we can never see a dizzy, fuzzy, or cloudy space in them. They could knock precisely our brain with their serious and steady beats. “Civilization” is the longest, and another masterpiece in this album, that includes relaxation, calmness, massive attacks, laziness, risky performances, and impressive actions … all of them can be represented with five talented artists’ music play and rough-tough breathing. This eleven-minute art is just the highlight of the BIG (Dai) Circus Entertainment, let me say.



And yes, DJAMRA gives expression of "humour" via the whole album, not only a song as in the previous albums. Please enjoy The Osakan Taste fully.


Thank you for reading this blog. ٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶

Edited by DamoXt7942 - February 28 2011 at 05:38
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