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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: December 14 2009 at 03:07
Oh, Takeshi...I've not known about Opabinia...any of your comments or evals? Thumbs Up

And thanks Gabriel, and by your recommendation list above I'm sure you know well about Japanese progressive rock. Clap
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Takeshi Kovacs View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Takeshi Kovacs Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2009 at 04:58
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/Poseidon/?of=62


The above link has a number of interesting live performances from a number of Japanese prog bands, including Mizukagami, Interpose+, Bondage Fruit etc.

Damo - Opabinia is a kind of cross between experimental, RIO / Avant-Garde and Jazz Rock fusion, and appears to be a one-off band formed by members of other bands (Bondage Fruit / Altered States / ROVO).
Open the gates of the city wide....
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote LordPJoseph Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 25 2009 at 18:44
Hello again,

I've still been following this thread, and I noticed that user Honganji said he ordered the Kinniku Shoujo-Tai album titled "Sister Strawberry." This is one of my favorite albums of all time! I've seen King-Show (as they are known) live 5 times, and they are quite impressive live, especially their concert in September which was only songs from their first 4 albums!

I would like to know if you liked the album Sister Strawberry. Any thoughts?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 31 2009 at 08:20
Another short-lived Japanese psychedelic project - I'm glad to introduce you all! Clap

(SORRY NO ARTISTS' PHOTO AVAILABLE...) Embarrassed

PEOPLE were formed during a short term in 1971 as an (nearly) occasional 'shooting star' project to produce a novel psychedelic rock by blending their rock sounds and Buddhist Shomyo (sutra). All the members were renowned and talented Japanese session musicians - Kimio MIZUTANI (guitars, sitar), Yusuke HOGUCHI (keyboards, voices), Hideaki TAKEBE (bass), Kiyoshi TANAKA (drums, percussion), and Rally SUNAGA (gong, percussion). Calling Naoki TACHIKAWA as a producer and a director, they released a solemn and mysterious psych rock album 'Ceremony ~ Buddha Meet Rock' (1971), which was much appreciated by worldwide psychedelic rock fans.



Blended Rock with Buddhism was approved only by a part of psychedelic rock maniacs.

Prologue is the suggester - like a percussion, a dazzling variety of wooden clogs' clip-clops come here. And down-tempo drumming and orchestration can put enthusiasm into you coming across the meeting. However, yet you cannot realize this wondrous rendezvous only on it. Trust me, the curtain of this meeting will rise just the next track Shomyo Part 1. Gong. Beat, beat, dub, dub...eerie atmosphere will wrap you up, and Kimio's 'eavy 'uzzy guitar solo with a wooden percussion can shoot some rock flavour. A sutra - the Buddhist (and also Japanese) solemn culture - comes into the rock sounds and this song can be realized completely. This mono-tone sutra should be as impressive as such persistent guitar waves...absolutely the friendship between Buddhism and Psychedelic Rock. In the latter part, the rhythm gets slower a while and Kimio's aggressive guitar solo plus eccentric drumming and comfortable wooden kicks starts - with eerie sutra and thingy around him - as if he wears a Buddhist sound surplice. Maybe this mixture was (and is) hard for you and us to clarify...therefore this project might be short-lived I consider. Gatha, the third one, is much graver for you I imagine. Kimio's sitar can blow your mind terribly in spite of such a quiet airspace. Oh sorry terrifically, not terribly. :-P ...Jokin' aside, quieter percussion, filling up the space between sounds, should be fantastically solemn as well. Honestly, on the religious ritual percussion (wooden, metallic, or so) must push all believer into trance, passion and happiness. In the next Flower Strewing Hideaki's repetitive bass tones can get active, and give a hypnotic and transcendental atmosphere on this song based on Shomyo - sutra. Even such a mono-tone bass sound can throw dream and fantasy for you, if the bass player is a believer... Shomyo Part 2 is very simple but simultaneously very important. Here are a simple wooden percussion, quiet guitar and bass sounds, easy-listening keyboard solo, and a rhythmical sutra - you know, that's all. No need for you to consider, you can act naturally in such a simple Shomyo. I wanna emphasize that this song is a masterpiece in the album on the point of view - namely, 'simple is the best for Religion'. Prayer Part 1 & 2 are exactly trans-senders - primeval percussion and shouts in a trance by trippin' ladies sound rather weird and painful...at least for me. Epilogue may be a burnt-out situation...with pretty twitters and magnificent orchestration...but no human breath at all...what a vacant impression...?

PEOPLE left such a problematic and suggestive stuff for us psychedelic progressive rock fans, and it's absolutely right. On the contrary, sad to say, very hard to listen from beginning to finish. Therefore, as mentioned above, this project might break up soon a while.


Thank you for reading this blog...and HAPPY NEW YEAR! ٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶


Edited by DamoXt7942 - December 31 2009 at 09:03
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honganji View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote honganji Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 09:54
やあ、Peopleですか。これまた、70年代初期の極めつけの珍盤ですね。LPなんぞは町希少盤で、手に入らなかったので、私もその昔にCDで手にした口ですが。

入手確実とはいえませんが、最近4枚ほど日本の作品を注文してみました。
1.Fomalhaut / 春の嵐
2.葉月ゆら&翡翠 / Origin Notes
3.俺はこんなもんじゃない / OWKMJ
4.Go To HongKong / Concert In Numabukuro ~

そして、お得意の買い逃しに依る廃盤発生・・・
Kenso / Chilling Heat ~
もたもたしている間に、すっかり売切れてしまいました。中古で出るのを待つしかなさそうです。Pinch

中身は未聴で、発売されたのも2009年10月14日と多少日が経っていますが、霜月はるかさんが、久しぶりにオリジナル曲のみの新譜をリリースしています。ティンダーリアの種以来のはずです。ティンダーリアの種は、実はプログレッシヴ・フォーク・ロックとシンフォニック・ロックの中間のような作品で、アニメやゲームの歌手とばかりに捉えられている面もあり、本格的なプログレ・ファンからは見落とされがちですが、よく出来ています。新作は3990円。値が張っています。なかなか、手が出ません。
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Karamasov Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 21:52
I very much appreciate reading this blog!

My interest for japanese prog has grown very much lately, and my favourite japanese prog album (and also one of my favourite albums in general) is Yoninbayashi - Ishoku Sokuhatsu. This is pure 70's excellence, and everyone who likes prog should hear it Big smile Among my other favourites are also Cosmos Factory, Far East Family Band, Bi Kyo Ran, Flower Travellin' Band and Flied Egg.

Japan has many excellent progressive bands, and it's always great to discover something new, which I have done thanks to this blog Clap Arigato!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2010 at 02:12
Hi, progressive gang!
So sorry I could not come here to post my blog because of my laptops' trouble (currently in hospital). :-(

Today gonna recommend a terrific "accidental project" from Japan - have been discussed here again and again before I suggest, though.


(from left; Tatsuya YOSHIDA, Atsushi TSUYAMA, and Makoto KAWABATA)

SEIKAZOKU were formed "accidentally" in June 1996 by three renowned Japanese progressive artists - Atsushi TSUYAMA (bass, saz, voices; ex-Omoide Hatoba, Acid Mothers Temple), Makoto KAWABATA (guitar, violin, synthesizer; ex-Acid Mothers Temple, Floating Flower), and Tatsuya YOSHIDA (drums, percussion, oboe; ex-Ruins, Korekyojin, Koenjihyakkei, The Magaibutsu). Without any notice they appeared on the stage of Nishioji Kumin Centre in Tokyo and scattered an extremely improvised play around there, which was recorded and released as 'Outtakes '66~'78 in 1998. In their second album 'Warsaw Joyaku (Treaty Of Warsaw)', released in 1999, they pushed improvisation and progressiveness more aggressively with their incomparable talent and essence for psychedelic progressive rock, heavy rock, Krautrock, and Raga rock. This album is highly appreciated by lots of psych-Kraut-avant progressive rock fans all over the world. Even now, we can come across SEIKAZOKU somewhere occasionally, with extremely alternative, eccentric sound and style.


Warsaw Joyaku (Treaty Of Warsaw) (1999)

Come on and say, everyone, "Mamma mia!"

Upon my first listening to this album, it was so surprising almost unclassified 'sound magma' could be blown out from their inner space. Although each of them played as he wanted to do, the sounds can be well harmonized and bear some comfort for the audience - even Makoto's violin like a noise of a saw (sorry), or Atsushi's Indo-voices like an elephant's growling (sorry again). At any rate, the key instruments should be all - Oriental drums & percussion sounds, down-tempo dancing bass ones, dry violin noises, aggressive and violent guitar solo by Speed Guru, etc. etc. pop in suddenly and disappear by turns. Naturally, here come lots of scenes with the essence of Kraut, psych, spacey, heavy, Indo-Raga...absolutely overflowing. Here are too many many elements to be categorized into an apparent subgenre easily. Hmm, however wait, wonder if there's a sharing of musical styles between them? For example, Tatsuya and Atsushi should play with Indo-Raga and avantgarde style, and on the contrary, Makoto with heavily psychedelic one...? Joking aside, their plays and sounds are very rich and very spiritualized to let us audience get remarkably rich imagination. Wonderfully, we can hear various sound colours in the album; a part sounds like King Crimson's dry guitar and violin blended in 'Starless And Bible Black', or another sounds like a crazy synth noise in Alberto Ginastera's 'Toccata'...very interesting and fantastic. And trust me, the most enjoyable and pleasant persons around this album should be SEIKAZOKU themselves I wanna say. Namely, the extremely perfect and ideal improvised battles they can show to us. (Oh, anyway, the titles of the songs we cannot understand at all!)

The more times you listen to this album, the more you can be addicted by SEIKAZOKU. Highly guaranteed!




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: January 14 2010 at 02:24
Originally posted by Karamasov Karamasov wrote:

I very much appreciate reading this blog!

My interest for japanese prog has grown very much lately, and my favourite japanese prog album (and also one of my favourite albums in general) is Yoninbayashi - Ishoku Sokuhatsu. This is pure 70's excellence, and everyone who likes prog should hear it Big smile Among my other favourites are also Cosmos Factory, Far East Family Band, Bi Kyo Ran, Flower Travellin' Band and Flied Egg.

Japan has many excellent progressive bands, and it's always great to discover something new, which I have done thanks to this blog Clap Arigato!
Thanks Arigato Karamasov! Big smile
You're an intellectual of Japanese progressive rock I imagine. Clap

Anyway, in Progarchives:
YONINBAYASHI (Eclectic)
COSMOS FACTORY (Psych/Space)
FAR EAST FAMILY BAND (Psych/Space)
BI KYO RAN (Heavy)
FLOWER TRAVELLIN' BAND (Psych/Space)
FLIED EGG (Not in PA but now under evaluation)

Please check more Japanese bands here. Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2010 at 02:28
Hi, Honganji san! Thanks for your brilliant (and eccentric Tongue) information.
Maybe...no, surely (!), PEOPLE should be added in Progarchives library anytime soon. Star
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Takeshi Kovacs Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 14 2010 at 17:01
Damo - I'm loving the Date Course Pentagon Royal Garden album Report From Iron Mountain at the moment. Could you recommend other Japanese bands with a similar style to this?

Thanks

Takeshi
Open the gates of the city wide....
Check out my music taste: http://www.last.fm/user/TakeshiKovacs/
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 06:08
Let me recommend a young Japanese Progressive Party! Clap



RYODAN (in English "Party Of Travelers") were formed in 2003 as a thirteen-piece (what a huge patry!) outfit in Tokyo. Hoising "the mixture of ethnic percussionism and rock music" as their motto, they featured lots of tribal instruments - Djembe, Yidaki, Didgeridoo, Tabla, Conga, Bongo...etc. etc. - and gigged energetically around Tokyo. On stage they invited various renowned Japanese progressive artists, especially Yuji Katsui and Yohichi Okabe (ROVO) or Shibusashirazu, and could be much appreciated. In August 2006 RYODAN released the debut album "Iyaoi Rhythm" from a Japanese independent label Penguinmarket Records, in collaboration with Yuji Katsui and Yohichi Okabe, engineered by Yoshiaki Kondoh (producing albums of ROVO or Shibusashirazu). Their second album "Terra Incognita" was out in May 2008, live-recorded at Yoyogi Park on August 5, 2007 and united amazingly with the audience.


Terra Incognita (Live at Yoyogi Park on Aug. 5, 2007)

Ethnic percussion sounds and an extremely dry violin solo can let us fall into trance with acceleration.

Consider it should be a rare case that such an ethnicity can be aggressive in front of a progressive rock (or music) outfit. So important is their ethnicity for RYODAN to be united with the audience I guess. Heavily percussive plays and keen violin sounds like a cry of a fierce animal absolutely can construct their original psychedelia up. And another point is they can put enthusiasm into the audience with strengthening the sounds by each instrument. Such a tendency we can see especially in the first track The Wild Boar Ire, in that passionate percussion breaks a quiet atmosphere in the audience completely away. The following song Africa, a masterpiece in this work, is exactly a ritual by RYODAN and friends (audience). 13 players can make a wonderland named Africa, with lots of instruments, performances, sweat, breath ... all are the builders of Africa, okay? Their minimalism is not boring at all but colourful for alternative rhythm and style I feel - in When My Legs No Longer Carry and Meridian Bay the "alternations" should be very attractive for us in spite of each simple sound. In the next All Forest Children Of Tayutafu comes rocomoon, a female vocalist. Mysterious and delicious voices - not heard in their albums - can show many pretty children dance pleasantly and elegantly we can imagine. The last three songs are HEAVEN'S DOOR for the audience. Pathetique Hydrangea can let its flower open gradually, with pretty but solemn appearance and hypnotically eerie fragrance. Upon Cambrian Explosion ~ Sadame. their psychedelia can be completed, all instruments shoot aggressively noisy and enthusiastic sounds and let the audience and us fall into their primeval space mercilessly.

Hey, mates, let's go on a trip with us! As if we should be called so by RYODAN - Party Of Travelers. Highly recommended.


Thank you for reading this blog.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Raff Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 06:28
Hello KeishiroSmile! As I told you, I often get Japanese prog CDs to review. One that impressed me quite a bit is Baraka's Shades of Evolution - excellent, guitar-based instrumental prog. I know the band have released another six or seven albums before that. Are you familiar with them?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 17:22
Originally posted by Takeshi Kovacs Takeshi Kovacs wrote:

Damo - I'm loving the Date Course Pentagon Royal Garden album Report From Iron Mountain at the moment. Could you recommend other Japanese bands with a similar style to this?

Thanks

Takeshi
Thanks Takeshi!

Naruyoshi KIKUCHI, the leader of DCPRG, is one of pioneers in Japanese Avant-mixture rock.
Sorry I'm not an intellectual about the scene but let me recommend you GUNJOGACRAYON, an eccentric Japanese avant band. 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 02 2010 at 17:28
Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

Hello KeishiroSmile! As I told you, I often get Japanese prog CDs to review. One that impressed me quite a bit is Baraka's Shades of Evolution - excellent, guitar-based instrumental prog. I know the band have released another six or seven albums before that. Are you familiar with them?
Raff, always appreciate you much reviewing lots of Japanese progressive albums! Big smile

I'm not familiar with them but too much love BANDVIVIL, Issei TAKAMI's another project.
Please check Kazuhiro's and my review about their one and only album.

About BARAKA, gonna check soon...let me have time. Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Takeshi Kovacs Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2010 at 18:14
Originally posted by DamoXt7942 DamoXt7942 wrote:

Originally posted by Takeshi Kovacs Takeshi Kovacs wrote:

Damo - I'm loving the Date Course Pentagon Royal Garden album Report From Iron Mountain at the moment. Could you recommend other Japanese bands with a similar style to this?

Thanks

Takeshi
Thanks Takeshi!

Naruyoshi KIKUCHI, the leader of DCPRG, is one of pioneers in Japanese Avant-mixture rock.
Sorry I'm not an intellectual about the scene but let me recommend you GUNJOGACRAYON, an eccentric Japanese avant band. Wink 


Thanks - I have heard the Naruyoshi Kikuchi Dub Sextet, and enjoyed it.
Open the gates of the city wide....
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 18 2010 at 01:02
Sorry but please let me get derailed out of Japan.
Today please let me introduce a psychedelic progressive rock outfit from Baltimore - SRI AUROBINDO, with full of East-oriented flavour.
In them I as a Japanese can feel some cool Japanese air... this is the reason I wanna recommend them to you here.


SRI AUROBINDO (From left to right - Mike FURNIERE, Mike ROMANO, Brandon ARINOLDO, and Danny CHENAULT)


SRI AUROBINDO were formed as a four-piece Baltimore rock outfit in mid-2000s. The four Baltimoren genies - Brandon ARINOLDO (bells, hand drums, tambourine, voices), Danny CHENAULT (drums, acoustic guitar), Mike ROMANO (keyboards, tambourine, sonic decimator pedal, bass), and Mike FURNIERE (flute, banjo, guitar) - have got motivated more than enough and tried to produce their original psychedelia with essence of East-oriented psychedelic music, Psychedelic Progressive / Space Rock, Krautrock, Oldies, indie rock, or some ethnic music. 2009 was the golden year for them - the eponymous debut album and a grand EP "Return Into Earth" were released, both of which can amaze and craze lots of fans and reviewers. Their passion for Neues cannot die...they got started to record the new album "Cave Painting" late 2009.



Return Into Earth EP (2009) - SRI AUROBINDO


Michael Furniere, a multi-instrumentalist of SRI AUROBINDO, said to me in Japanese "Heiwa (Peace)". Yes, SRI AUROBINDO play that improvised and peaceful (heiwa-full?) psychedelia with their terrific skill and imagination for progressive rock.

Filled with their laidback flight and their improvised but well-cooperated play, this great huge sound-story named Return Into Earth goes forward like a flying eagle called SRI AUROBINDO. This story gets started with quiet percussion (Cymbal and Gong hits) and dry, surrealistic flute solo. As if a maiden or a nymph dances and gradually flies into the heaven... Exactly the percussion ensemble (double drum & percussionists are here!) with exotic (especially Oriental) mood in their inner space do have such an atmosphere, everyone can feel - it's right indeed, but I also feel that keen flute's and stumbling guitar's sounds are fascinatingly or magically comfortable. Of course trust me the bassist play strictly just as the pacesetter all of them...without steady rhythm section this spacey sound-story cannot burst in such a way. From the middle to the latter parts twin guitars keep growling loudly and construct complete psychedelic clouds in the sky where the "eagle" flies. And the guitars complete feeling the cool air, the eagle slowly tries to go down into the ground...calmly and solemnly.

Over 32 minute sound-story cannot be long and boring at all - let me call this absolutely Oriental Ambient-ish Space Rock with magnificence and magical toxin.

Peace - heiwa. :-)


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2010 at 07:27
So sorry for my shabby writin' after "a jog after work"... Embarrassed

Today let me recommend again a Japanese "Progressive Antique" outfit Guernica, and their second album "Shin-seiki E No Unga" full of symphonic sounds, in comparison with the previous electronic one.
Should their 5-year hibernation induce them to get more symphonic and dramatic? Or the mainstream of the times in Japan do so...? Confused




Shin-seiki E No Unga (1988) - GUERNICA

Short songs but with powerful synth plus orchestration and paranoic voices in it...a hard-to-categorize musical style as before.

The theme is exactly a Japanese Dadaism named "Taisho-Romanticism", shouted about a hundred years before in Japan. The members of Guernica veiled themselves antique dresses and archaic words & music, produced by a talented multi-instrumentalist Koji UENO, a voice bewitcher Jun TOGAWA, and a terrifically illusionary artist Keiichi OHTA. The songs here have, just as the previous ones, frequent rhythm alterations and quick changes of the scenes, far from the current pop- or media-ism. Even only the instrumental plays on her background are so avantgarde and progressive, and Jun's mysterious and paranoiac voices can completely immerse us listeners into her psychotropic caravan. Yes guess almost all of progressive rock fans have not known about Japanese old-fashioned songs at all but let me say they should have such flavour as GUERNICA - loud and exaggerated horn sections, inorganic and strict-for-tone voices, and a bad recording condition (oh, it's not here...sorry). GUERNICA went ahead and showed antique, archaic, and artistic technique on a progressive way.

Maybe...in my humble opinion, surely...GUERNICA will be progressive forever all around the world.




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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 25 2010 at 04:18
This is absolutely a Japanese proto-psychedelic progressive project let me say! Clap



Kuni KAWACHI, born in Fukuoka, Japan on July 7th, 1940, has enjoyed playing piano since he was young. In 1964, Kuni and his younger brother Chito KAWACHI formed a five-piece Latin rock outfit SUNRISE in his hometown. Highly approved by a famous Japanese 'new classical music' composer Toshiro MAYUZUMI, they appeared on stage in Tokyo with changing the band name to THE HAPPENINGS FOUR. Around the Japanese music scene in those days, terribly infested with lots of childish pop bands, they got renowned with marvelously skilled and foreseeing play (without any guitar).

KUNI KAWACHI AND HIS FRIENDS was Kuni's side project in the heyday of THE HAPPENINGS FOUR, with Joe YAMANAKA (voices) and Hideki ISHIMA (guitars) - soon later Joe and Hideki formed FLOWER TRAVELLIN' BAND, therefore KUNI KAWACHI AND HIS FRIENDS is considered as 'Pre-FLOWER TRAVELLIN' BAND' - and released their one and only album 'Kirikyogen' in 1970, much appreciated by Japanese progressive rock fans. (Anyway, in some rock music database we can find the project name was 'Kuni Kawachi and Flower Travellin' Band', that's a great mistake. Angry)

After disbanding THE HAPPENINGS FOUR, Kuni works hard as a solo musician, a producer / arranger on TV programs for children, or a composer for commercials and jingles.


Kirikyogen (1970) - KUNI KAWACHI AND HIS FRIENDS

Hard-edged Joe's voices and Hideki's psychedelically flickered guitar solo (just like Flower Travellin'!), and less noticeable but steady pacemaker Kuni's keyboards - this project is, without any suspicion, Kuni KAWACHI's show, not of Flowers.

In this project and album, Kuni undertook the composition, arrangement and production of all songs. Guess he might have a strong intention to construct a Japanese psychedelic hard rock up by six hands of the ensemble (oh, sorry but there were some guest musicians playing the rhythm section). Therefore the lyrics are all in Japanese language and Joe sang loudly the Japanese lyrics, opposite to English ones in Flower Travellin' band later. A bit more mysterious and eccentric his 'Japanese' voices are...that's the reason they could not be approved much all over the world I'm afraid. (Okay today I do let everyone here accept them completely! :-P) The lyrics seem to be very simple but actually should be philosophical and deeply meaningful (e.g. a great actor / actress in a small theatre as a metaphor for actions of each people all over the world, or 'men's scientific investigations of women' etc. etc. ), but Joe's voices are loud, rough, less delicate unlike a Japanese singer. Based on heavy riffs, sometimes floated and sometimes spacey and sometimes brain-shaking Hideki's guitar solo can remind us the heavy-psychedelic sounds of Flowers. But wait, this project should be exactly in the vanguard of Japanese psychedelic (and heavy) progressive rock scene.

Hope you can enjoy this pioneer of Japanese psychedelic progressive - although they should not have an intention to build the current huge Japanese progressive scene at that moment methinks.


Kuni-san Doll...pretty...eh? Tongue


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honganji View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote honganji Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 07 2010 at 16:59
初期の作品は入手が困難ですが、最近の作品が割と手に入りやすいので、是非是非推薦なのが、少女病。
3枚ほど手にしましたが、Sound Horizonタイプで、その手の作品が好きな方には大推薦です。Damoさんもいかが?
 
&amp;#24927;&amp;#21741;&amp;#12523;&amp;#12463;&amp;#12475;&amp;#12452;&amp;#12531; ←慟哭ルクセイン
 
他には古い作品で、しかも、ジャズどっぷりですが菊地雅章さんの1970年収録の作品2種。こちらは、本当に白熱の名演ですが、PAのポリシーに合うかどうかは微妙。私は大好きです。
 
&amp;#12480;&amp;#12531;&amp;#12471;&amp;#12531;&amp;#12464;&amp;#12539;&amp;#12511;&amp;#12473;&amp;#12488;~&amp;#33738;&amp;#22320;&amp;#38597;&amp;#31456;&amp;#12452;&amp;#12531;&amp;#12539;&amp;#12467;&amp;#12531;&amp;#12469;&amp;#12540;&amp;#12488; ←ダンシング・ミスト
2月は一枚も日本物を注文しなかったので、3月に入りぼつぼつです。
そのほかAAOBBだとかハプニングス・フォー+1/引潮・満潮だとかも入手済みで、予定ではミドリ「あらためまして、はじめまして、ミドリです。」や寺山修司-田中星児の異色作品「イソップ物語」等も予定しています。
 
&amp;#23546;&amp;#23665;&amp;#20462;&amp;#21496; &amp;#12452;&amp;#12477;&amp;#12483;&amp;#12503;&amp;#29289;&amp;#35486;(&amp;#32025;&amp;#12472;&amp;#12515;&amp;#12465;&amp;#12483;&amp;#12488;&amp;#20181;&amp;#27096;) ←イソップ物語
 
&amp;#12354;&amp;#12425;&amp;#12383;&amp;#12417;&amp;#12414;&amp;#12375;&amp;#12390;&amp;#12289;&amp;#12399;&amp;#12376;&amp;#12417;&amp;#12414;&amp;#12375;&amp;#12390;&amp;#12289;&amp;#12511;&amp;#12489;&amp;#12522;&amp;#12391;&amp;#12377;&amp;#12290; ←あらためまして、はじめまして、ミドリです。
 
&amp;#24341;&amp;#28526;&amp;#12539;&amp;#28288;&amp;#28526; ←引潮・満潮
 
 ←AAOBB
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DamoXt7942 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2010 at 01:57
Oh, honganji ... Lolita complex? ... auuu, just kiddin'. LOL

Jokin' aside, as for MIDORI I've heard a while before and felt they should be still only in the experimental post-punk area (upon both musical and visual styles), with less progressive kicks.

To be honest, not my glass of whisky ...

And this sleeve?



Today my blog cooperates with a porn shop. Tongue
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