Brush!? - Brush!?




Brush!? were Shime Takahashi and Akira Asami (two thirds of Lost Aaraaff ... the same Akira from Gyaatees perhaps?) and Masayoshi Takanaka. It starts off with cinema organ music that can't stop me thinking of the intermission and ending music of Monty Python and the Holy Grail and becomes more curious from there. It's almost as though it can't make it's mind up what it is. This was originally released as an LP in 1971 on an unknown label. Maybe after the refusal to accept the Group Sounds orthodoxy, they fell on the polite side of the divide before going on to create much more adventurous music. The musical styles switch all over the place and this won't last too long in the memory but it still needs to be heard. But maybe only once ...

Brush!?

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Karuna Khyal - Alomoni 1985




This is the (slightly more) psychotic sibling of Debon. Beefheartian swamp-delta psychedelic blues for the criminally insane ... it's the work of a genius and/or the plural thereof. I'm not sure what is the more astonishing ... this record or the fact that it was 24 years before it saw the light of day again. The LP was released on Voice Records in 1974 and it disappeared until Clive had the common decency to let us hear it again by unofficially re-releasing it on Paradigm Discs in 1998. If I'm ever lucky enough to meet Clive I'm going to have to kiss him. Fair warning, there might be tongues.

I posted this nearly four years ago. Frankly, I find that fairly scary ... does anybody know where time actually goes? Anyway, it's appropriate that this nestles next to Debon.

Alomoni 1985

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Brast Burn - Debon




Who the hell were Brast Burn? If somebody knows, I've not met them. They appear to have some kind of relationship with Karuna Khyal but nobody knows who they were either. Both appear to have some kind of connection with Yoshihiro Takahashi who has recently appered as a producer on a few releases on Kaitai Records. What I do know is that they only released one LP and damn they left on top. This is a hallucinatory fever dream of an album ... Can as heard in the fifth dimension? Demonic folk music? I seriously can't think of any meaningful comparisons to this record. It really is a remarkable thing to experience. Originally released on Japan's little known Voice Records in 1975, it disappeared from view until Clive Graham resurrected it on his Paradigm Discs in 1998 and we should all be eternally grateful!

Burn Baby Burn

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Gyaatees - 1




Thirty three and a half minutes of improvised and twisted delight formally introduced Gyaatees to the world.

Another Captain Trip release, this time from 1997.

One

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Gyaatees Meets Mani Neumeier - Gyaatees II




Mani Neumeier is probably best known as one of the founder members of the legendary Guru Guru and his collaborations with Acid Mothers Temple. Here he adds a structure to proceedings ... the fact that it is a motorik structure makes it all the better.

Double CD released on Captain Trip Records in 1999.

One

Two

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Gyaatees - Gyaatees III: Welcome Motoharu Yoshizawa Last Live




... and the legendary free-jazzer Motoharu Yoshizawa is definitely more than welcome! Recorded live at La-Mama, Shibuya, Tokyo in 1998 and Keihoku-Shogakko Tukui, Kanagawa in 1998.

CD released on Captain Trip Records in 1999.

Welcome Motoharu-Yoshizawa Last Live

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Gyaatees - 4, Live At Show Boat




Gyaatees appear to have been Akira, Tairyu Kakuta, Yokai Takahashi (who at one point was the bassist with Les Rallizes Denudes) and some Sei-sou priests."Sei-sou" apparently means somebody who is intellectually handicapped. I always thought that all priests were intellectually handicapped. Ah well and anyway...

This CD was released on Captain Trip Records in 2001 and captures the troupe live at the Showboat venue in Tokyo.

Expect psychedelically-minded off kilter jazz fuelled made up space rock carnage.

Live At Show Boat

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Akira Ishikawa & Count Buffalos - Electrum




In 1970, they released an album of extremely accomplished but very conventional Burt Bacharach covers. Then, in the same year, they dropped this monster. There are parts of the structure that echo the earliest Mothers Of Invention albums but really this is hyped up jazz with a funk heart. The musicianship is truly jaw-dropping.

It took THIRTY SIX years before anybody thought to repress this ... seriously, what is wrong with people?

Electrum

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Akira Ishikawa & Count Buffalos - Uganda (Dawn Of African Rock) [ウガンダ]




Straight from the first sustained drone, you realise that you are in a different world to the one that you are acquainted with. Then the guitar squall kicks in alongside some frenzied tribal drumming. About half way through a random Mothers Of Invention-style time signature drops almost like is a signal to the band "hey guys, this is Africa" so they oblige with some "authentic" tribal chanting before that comes to a close and there is the most psychedelic guitar freak-out over a funky back beat which abruptly stops and the guitar threatens to launch into a feedback squall but doesn't. That's only the first track!

Originally, this LP was released on Toshiba Records in 1972. It took 34 (yes, THIRTY FOUR) years before anybody thought to repress it. Quite simply one of the greatest and most deliriously exciting things ever committed to vinyl.

Uganda

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Group Ongaku - Music of Group Ongaku


You may not have heard the name Group Ongaku, but you've sure heard of some of the group members. Takehisa Kosugi (who would go on to lead Taj Majal Travellers and East Bionic Symphonia) and Shukou Mizunao (now an established composer and artist) were just college students in Tokyo in the late 1950's when they roped in some friends (including Yasunao Tone and Fluxus artist Mieko Shiomi) to create group improvisations and soundtracks for modern dance. The recordings on this very rare CD, which as far as I'm aware are the only existing recordings of the group, were made in 1960 and 1961. As a historical document, the significance of this album is self-evident. It's helpful, though, that the music is also great.

Group Ongaku - Music of Group Ongaku

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Chie Mukai & Rinji Fukuoka - L'Energie De L'Existence

More kokyu screeching and sawing from Chie Mukai, this time in a duo with Rinji Fukuoka of the astounding psych rock band Overhang Party (go buy the boxset of their complete studio work from Important Records now) and now Majutsu no Niwa. This came out in 2003 as a CD on Turtle's Dream, a French label that was an offshoot of A Bruit Secret.

Chie Mukai & Rinji Fukuoka - L'Energie De L'Existence

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Chie Mukai & Masayoshi Urabe - Dual Anarchism

It appears that Badgerstump is on a Japanese underground rampage, so I'm going to jump in and keep this party going for awhile. This LP came out on Siwa in 2002, and features duo improvisations by Chie Mukai (a singer and multi-instrumentalist who's known mainly for her kokyu playing, though she was a member of the legendary East Bionic Symphonia and has led her "pop" band Ché-SHIZU since 1981) and confrontational post-Abe sax player Masayoshi Urabe. It was limited to 400 copies, all of which are long gone by now.

Chie Mukai & Masayoshi Urabe - Dual Anarchism

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Various - Black To Communist 2




Mrs Inside and I thought that we would never hear this "unofficial" double CDr.

Thanks to an anonymous and wonderful person, you get Masayuki Takayanagi And New Direction For The Arts, East Bionic Symphonia, The Flowers, Stomu Yamash'ta & The Horizon, Masahiko Satoh, Speed, Glue & Shinki, Love Live Love Live Life Plus One and Taj Mahal Travellers.

More Hammer

More Sickle

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Les Rallizes Denudes & Yellow - Rallizes House Session at Fussa




Strictly speaking, the first disc is Les Rallizes Denudes and Be, with the latter being Taisuke Morishita who adds a synthesizer washout. This is the titular session recorded on the 1st of April, 1975. The second disc is Yellow recorded live at the Hitotsubashi University festival on the 11th of November, 1973. This is a wonderful acid-blues-rock sound delivered by Taisuke Morishita on bass and vocals, Hiroshi Imaizumi on guitar and Lost Aaraaff drummer Hiroyuki Takahashi.

Double CD released on Dead Flower in 2004.

Rallizes House

Hitotsubashi University festival

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Various - Black To Communist




Unofficial double CDr of relatively hard to find tracks from previous releases and compilations. Yellow, Acid Seven, Blues Creation, Masayuki Takayanagi's New Direction, Karuna Khyal, Lost Aaraaff, Murahachibu, Brast Burn, ◯△▢ and Zuno Keisatsu. Maybe more of a jump-off point to begin to explore the Japanese commune / festival scene of the late 60's and early 70's but a fine thing in its own right.

There was a second volume that we have never heard ... maybe if you have it, we could be cured of that painful itch?

The Hammer

The Sickle

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Various - Nihon Nihilist




J. A. Seazer, On Stuff (who appear to only appear here), Kousokuya (with the extremely rare appearance of Asahito Nanjo joining on bass), Les Rallizes Denudes (as Hadaka no Rallizes), High Rise (denoted as Psychedelic Speed Freak) and Magical Power Mako.

Where the hell did this CDr come from? The vaulted mind of Julian Cope, that's where this came from. In 2009.

You have read his Krautrocksampler and Japrocksampler books several hundred times haven't you? Ah good ... how could I have doubted you?

It's Japanoise Jim, but not as you know it.

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Aube & Nagisanite - Metalmollification

Split cassette released in 1999 by G.R.O.S.S. and Org Records in a limited edition of 117 copies, with live performances by Aube (using metal sounds) on one side and three songs by acid-rock band Nagisanite on the other.

Aube & Nagisanite - Metalmollification

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Aube, Nagasa Ni Te, Naoki Zushi - Orbital Confluence (Benefit 2000)

Another three-way split CD, this time featuring Aube with Naoki Zushi (formerly of Hijokaidan and The Hallelujahs) and acid-rock band Nagisa Ni Te (featuring Zushi on guitar and the legendary Ikuro Takahashi on drums). It was released to coincide with a concert to benefit survivors of the Hanshin Awaji earthquake of 1995.

Orbital Confluence

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Aube, John Duncan, Schloss Tegal - The Mind of a Missile

Three-way split CD from a German label called Heel Stone, which only existed from 1994 to 1996 and managed to release just three albums. This one is supposed to be about military something-or-other ("Deadly Science" is not, I don't think, an actual warning label that any military organization applies to real documents). 

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Various - Genya Concert 1971




These are live recordings from the Sanritsuka Genyasai festival held on the 14th and 15th of August 1971. There was a CD release that contained only the music tracks. The is the double CD release from 2003 that also contains the spoken word elements. Whilst I don't understand a word that is said, it still adds a lot to the atmosphere. Musically, you get Dew, Lost Aaraaff, Blues Creation and Zuno Keisatsu.

Sanritsuka

Genyasai

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