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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Hi, every Japanese progressive rock freak, especially Neo-Prog fan!
TAKU YABUKI UNIT left to right; Taku YABUKI (keyboards), Mana IWANAGA (bass), Yoshinori IMAI (drums, percussion), and Hidehisa SASAKI (guitar) Already posted about the gigs by ZONK MONK and DJAMRA, and let me introduce and recommend a phantastyk gig by TAKU YABUKI UNIT, founded by Taku YABUKI, a keyboardist of KOENJIHYAKKEI.
According to what Ai and Shoko (Zonk Monk) say, the soundscape of Taku could be the origin of Zonk Monk. They played some songs in their debut album "Modern World Symphony" and newer ones recently performed on stage ... every track sounds Neo-symphonic (Taku's keyboard-sound-based), along with complex polyrhythm and dramatic sounddream. Looks like Taku's a sincere and serious musician, with a strong intention and enthusiasm for "rock" and "music". Let me say TAKU YABUKI UNIT should belong to PA! Look, and listen! Japanese Neo-Prog!!! Thank you for reading this blog. |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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^ And as Taku YABUKI, I've checked his solo debut album ... recommended not only Neo freaks but also all of symphonic / eclectic ones!
Modern World Symphony (2007) - Taku YABUKI Taku YABUKI is a Japanese keyboardist who is well versed in classic, jazz, and of course rock, and has already been renowned as a member of KOENJIHYAKKEI. Luckily I’ve attended a gig by one of his projects named Taku Yabuki Unit in collaboration with Yoshinori IMAI (drums, percussion), Hidehisa SASAKI (guitar), and Ryosuke NIKAMOTO (bass) (Maki IWANAGA replaced Ryosuke as bassist on the gig anyway), and got immersed in their aggressive "Musiquake" constructed / purified with keyboard, bass, guitar, and drums material. In spite of such an aggressive music tactic on stage held by the Unit, this album "Modern World Symphony" has completely amazed me as a brilliant versatility, along with Taku’s intensive enthusiasm and quick adaptation for various musical genres. Actually, lots of talented musicians have collaborated with him upon this creation, whilst his personality / originality cannot get suppressed at all. Guess Taku’s sometimes pushed his keyboard shower out ahead, and sometimes supported his collaborators with his massive key plays ... both of his works, plays are sublime and enough to cheer all players (including himself) up. A perfect example where Taku played at the frontest "Freedom Landscape" is such a theatrical keyboard-based creation enough to absorb us into his dramatic, kaleidoscopic gemmy plays. On the other hand, "Genesis" or "Bird Of Passage" sounds like a fantastic joint interview by all players, with delightful uptempo beats and sounds (on stage they all have played more aggressively than this studio-made version as honestly I say ... cheers and shouts have been given here and there). Their eclecticism originated from mainly jazz, classic, and rock complete creating their peculiar rock symphony upon this album. Recommended for all progressive rock freaks, especially familiar with Symphonic / Neo / Jazz Rock. Thank you for reading this blog. |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Hi, again sorry for my hibernation. Recently I’ve got to be a slow reviewer really ... :P
Japanese heavy jazz rock quartet NEXT ORDER Already reviewed about NEXT ORDER’s gig in Osaka and today please let me recommend their live album "Live -Intensified" here! Live-Intensified (2011) - NEXT ORDER A Japanese heavy jazz rock combo NEXT ORDER were founded as a twin-guitar-oriented quartet in August 2002, by two Nagoya-based musicians - Yuji MUTO (guitar), Atsutomo ISHIGAKI (bass) - and two Osaka-based ones - Takumi SEINO (guitar), Hiroshi 'Gori' MATSUDA (drums). They've gigged with lots of progressive artists like Uz Jsme Doma or Gongzilla since their early days, whilst they signed a formal contract with Lolo Records in 2004 for releasing their material all around the world. Through their borderless musical style amongst heavy rock, jazz, fusion, avantgarde, progressive rock, etc. etc., they've launched their original soundscape toward the audience upon stage. Evidently they've placed emphasis upon a close bond between the audience and themselves, and upon live material, so that all of their creations are live-recorded ones (of course this album "Live -Intensified" too). The first track "NDE?" (dunno what the tile means though ... "So What?" in English maybe). A heavy tip from the beginning has knocked us definitely. Atsutomo's bass explosion is a killer. The guitar sound combination by Yuji and Takumi is very kaleidoscopic and delicious. Gori's square drumming completely supports their whole play ... even though the guitar duo plays aggressively and violently. Sounds like the guitar duo should be the heroes, but their fantastic play cannot exist without the hard / strict / steady turf created by the bassist and the drummer. This stuff alerts us such a matter. Contrary to the heavy start, the following one "Bearclaw", in spite of the title, gives us something of quiet motivation via a contrast between Takumi's gentle guitar crying and Yuji's hardcore shot. Guess the audience should get immersed in their cool, chilling play down their spine. "L. C. M." is a heavy, complex, jazz-based improvisational institution, featuring deeply rhythmic riffs (by enthusiastic Gori and steady Atsutomo). Full of comfort indeed. "Unbirthday Gift", with meaningful touch in its title, has two appearances - one is fluent sound vision launched with smooth guitar streams, and another rigid footsteps based upon drums and bass steadiness. In "Shimauma", in English "Zebra", obvious gales or speedy flows can be felt around me, as if a zebra runs around upon being chased by flesh-eaters, but amazing at something cool along with their excellent play. Traditional colourful mid-tempo sound space can be heard in "Brother Heat" (but not hot but cool!) ... guess we can enjoy improvised calmness after aggressive explosive stuffs really. But wait, don't be deceived. They're still aggressive ... "Overdriven" reminds me that our brain can be overdriven by their massive attack. Yuji and Takumi squeeze their guitar passion play into our braincore and let us bind ourselves strictly. Enthusiasm rules. And the last "Old Red Chair On The Porch" is a compilation of their soundscape, let me say ... sometimes extemporaneous, sometimes floating, sometimes passionate, sometimes chilling, and sometimes delightful. They'd been kicking us away gradually into the sky overthere, okay? Full of passion, full of comfort, full of sensitivity, and full of innovative deluge via their stage and live-recorded album. Recommended. Thank you for reading this blog. |
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hellogoodbye
Forum Senior Member VIP member Joined: August 29 2011 Location: Troy Status: Offline Points: 7251 |
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These guys really fill the space
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Thanks Pierre. I believe they'll be added somewhere in PA anytime soon ...
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Hi again!
Cannot help telling you this amazing rendezvous ... Yoh OHYAMA (ASTURIAS) and Olav came across together in RoSfest 2013, and they discussed Asturias’ worldwide market and Progarchives. What a fantastic rendezvous for us and them! Electric Asturias (via their Facebook page)
Fractals (2011) - ELECTRIC ASTURIAS We can call this album as an excitement springing out, can’t we? According to what Yoh’s said to me, looks like ELECTRIC ASTURIAS, a Japanese Neo-Prog pride, could touch and attract the audience in RoSfest 2013 ... and we’ve easily understood this pleasant matter via their album "Fractals", that has more brilliant complexity, more comfortable aggression, and more definite "antipop" sense than previous works as ASTURIAS. "Time Traveller" in RoSfest 2013 Yes, in this album, we cannot avoid the main instrumental dish Tei’s violin, that might have got cheered up and brought out by Yoh’s composition and arrangement I guess. As if the violin sounds would tear our brain out with the musical gene cores entangled together, they launch gemmy enthusiasm, the ingredient of the first shot "Double Helix", followed by "Voice From Darkness", characterized by more powerful and darker bass, guitar, drum footsteps. Of course all instrumental parts, especially the rhythm section, play so solidly and dramatically that such a perfect opening can be born. Can be said as the most suitable for the first explosions in this album. "Double Helix" in RoSfest 2013 The middle three stuffs are pretty good too. "Castle In The Mist" has three sections- the first and the last are impressive in eccentric melodies created by Tei’s heavy, rigid weapon, and as for the middle one, we can get immersed in Yoshihiro’s beautiful piano play and psychedelic endeavour, just like the title says. "Moondawn" sounds like a dim light over the sound horizon solidified with hard massive rock symphony.In "Silent Tears - Cyber Transmission" mellow guitar-, dreamy violin-based rock fantasy seasoned with a bit acoustic flavour ... easily digested by the audience methinks. Moondawn On the other hand, the last meaningful "fateful" suite "Fate" has another melodic and solemn theatricalism, veiled firstly into synthesizer-based pipe organ silk and electric guitar divine beauty in the first part "Fugue", leaning toward their origin ACOUSTIC ASTURIAS. The second "Argus Last Stand" is a heavy killer along with heavy rhythms, heavy guitar machineguns, heavy keyboard beams, and heavy violin complex-fracture-organization. Reminds us something dramatic like Neo pioneers. The latest "The Lancer" is the true worth of ELECTRIC ASTURIAS featuring their original "rock" motivation and procedure ... keeping melodious-ism, dramatism, theatricalism, and enthusiasm in their inner minds. Superb album really, let me recommend as one of the musts in Japanese Neo-Prog scene. Thank you for reading this blog. |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Finally! A Japanese jazz-related rock combo NEXT ORDER will release their 6th album "The End Of The Beginning" upon July 27, 2013.
The End Of The Beginning (2013) - NEXT ORDER
Edited by DamoXt7942 - July 24 2013 at 19:12 |
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Evolver
Special Collaborator Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams Joined: October 22 2005 Location: The Idiocracy Status: Offline Points: 5482 |
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Did you write that? Can we cut and paste for a bio? They have been accepted for JR/F. |
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Trust me. I know what I'm doing.
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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^ Wow sweet.
Would you let me do their addition if you don't mind? |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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And finally Next Order and Taku Yabuki added to Jazz Rock / Fusion.
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Hi, innovative freaks!
Oboreta Ebi No Kenshi Hokokusho (The Autopsy Report Of Drowned Shrimp) have released their debut album "Anomalocaris" in March, 2013, and I've finished my review for that! Anomalocaris (2013) - The AUTOPSY REPORT OF A DROWNED SHRIMP
Thank you for reading this blog. Edited by DamoXt7942 - August 07 2013 at 13:15 |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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And all Japanesque progressive rock freaks!
I've attended Umezu Kazutoki Kiki Band and Djamra's gig in Osaka last night. Please check my review(s) for their fantastic, fascinating gigs. http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=94967 |
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seventhsojourn
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 11 2009 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 4006 |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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^ Wow, Chris ... thanks for your kind words (and sorry to miss your post above)!
ptf, looks fantastic ... I'll check and post my opinion / review soooooon! |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Hey Japanese progressive rock freaks, I'm back finally!
And let me say many thanks to my Japanese mate honganji for recommending such a superb combo ... KANZEON! Aki FUKAKUSA (Kanzeon, Far East Family Band)
Kanzeon (Compilation, 1991) - KANZEON At first let me say thanks to honganji for suggesting such a great Japanese obscure gem. KANZEON were a Japanese one-off project formed by Aki FUKAKUSA, a founder / bassist of FAR EAST FAMILY BAND, that be renowned all over the world as a Japanese psychedelic progressive rock band. Aki played in this project not only as a bassist but also a koto player, whilst KANZEON's soundscape sounds not only psychedelic but eclectic (featuring a couple of Japanese instruments like koto, fue, shakuhachi, tsuzumi, and yokobue), filled with Japanese / Oriental sound traits and Japanese words ... much influenced by Shin'ichi SUZUKI's keyboard work I guess, though. In the first track "Yokobue" they gave the first cry with thunder storm, after that massive rock symphony featuring heavy rhythm riffs and sharp-edged keyboard shots. Their melody / chord lines, keeping ethnic flavour, show a straightforward advance for innovative, aggressive symphonic complexity. Although a bit Neo-symphonic footsteps can be heard via keyboard plays, they got no place to compromise in their playstyle and composition. The second out "Sora No Ue", played on the stage in a Japanese live house legend Kichijoji Silver Elephant in 1981, is more psychedelic, leaning toward Far East Family Band, than the first bullet. And they pushed their ethnicity with Japanese traditional instruments out more directly than FEFB. In collaboration with several Japanese session musicians like Kiyohiko SEMBA, they splendidly have done a unification of rock and Japanese folk (yeah this is progressive rock really!). Anyway "Sora No Ue" recorded in a studio can be listened to in the fourth track ... please compare one with another ... the live version sounds more "lively" and more "organic" than the studio one, doesn't it? As if a dramatic theatre would go ahead for an impressive ending, they played sometimes strictly-with-music and sometimes improvisationally. Gradually they got more and more powerful, enthusiastic ... this stream can be called as one magnificent sound world, let me say. "Setsuyubo" (to be honest, we're afraid we might not read this Kanji title precisely) reminds me Floyd's "Shine On You Crazy Diamond". Obviously their symphonic psychedelia should get inspired by Pink Floyd ... especially in Roger's era. So beautiful is a fusion of heavy bluesy downtempo knocks with depressive Japanese voices and ambient ghostly atmosphere with chilling synthesizer blizzards. Some phrases are slightly pop-ish but who cares? Their psychline heard here, there, everywhere is beyond expression, like Aki's former combo. The last "Toryanse" is a famous Japanese nursery rhyme, that contains quite terrible sense (you can go forward but never come back ... omg). Female voices arouse such an atmospheric sound-spectacle along with old-fashioned traditional Orientalism / Japanesque-ism. We get into a dead end and of course cannot come back to our mind. Can feel lyrical, thrilling, and theatrical song parade in this obscure, but fascinating creation. Very regretful they'd got disbanded with only one gem left in the progressive rock scene. Thank you for reading this blog. |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Anyway, FINALLY a Japanese proto (lemme say) The Happenings Four have been added to Related.
http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=8496 |
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Sheavy
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: March 28 2010 Location: Alabama Status: Offline Points: 2866 |
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Just want to drop in with a quick suggestion to listen to mr. Takehisa kosugi's solo album catch wave. I think this is something you would immensely enjoy.
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Joined: October 15 2008 Location: Okayama, Japan Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
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Off-topic.
Not progressive really but in Japan was such an addictive, amazing psychedelic pop song ... "Umi No Soko De Utau Uta (Sing The Song At The Bottom Of The Sea)" (1969) by Moco Beaver Olive. Imagine that lovers come across at the bottom of the sea and sing the song together ... with gazing at each other. What a psychedelia the pair of lovers launch. |
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