
May 31-June 2
Melt Banana
Australia Gigs
May 31st: Noise Night at Opera Theatre
Vivid Live at Sydney Opera House - curated by Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed.
w/ Boris and Bardo Pond
June 2nd: MxBx Solo performance at The Studio
Source: Site


May 31-June 2
Melt Banana
Australia Gigs
May 31st: Noise Night at Opera Theatre
Vivid Live at Sydney Opera House - curated by Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed.
w/ Boris and Bardo Pond
June 2nd: MxBx Solo performance at The Studio
Source: Site

See Also: Calendar, Experimental, Hard Rock, June, May, Melt Banana, Punk

Boris
UK, Australia and US gigs
ALL TOMORROW'S PARTIES Curated by Pavement
May 14 (FRI) 16(SUN)
Butlin's Holiday Centre, Minehead (UK)
Information: http://www.atpfestival.com/
Vivid Live festival Curated by Lou Reed and Laurie Anderson
May 28 (FRI)
Sydney Opera House (Australia)
Information: http://vividlive.sydneyoperahouse.com/Default.aspx
ALL TOMORROW'S PARTIES Curated by Jim Jarmusch
September 5 (SUN)
Kutsher's Country Club, Monticello, New York (USA)
SUNN O))) and BORIS present ALTAR
Information: http://www.atpfestival.com/newsview/1003251415.php
Source: MySpace


If Melt Banana and The Aprils had sex at a carnival, Hosome might have been their bouncing baby beast. Given an overstuffed toy-box, some half-broken electronic gadgets and a metronome better suited from some sort of Lovecraftian ritual, that child would grow and produce this sort of childish yet intricate music.
Slathered in a thick layer of echo and reverberations, it's a bit tough to pick out any sharp outlines in Hosome's music, though that's probably for the best. There is so much going on in each short slip of a song that trying to focus only causes the listener to miss out on most of the track. The keyboards pump out a drunken carnival stomp, while the guitars swing along with the unpredictable drum lines. The dual male/female vocals also keep things swirling and spinning around as they interweave, calling back and forth to each other across the midway.
Another interesting aspect of the band (as if they need anything more) are their live shows. In a live setting, all of the haziness is stripped away and the band is a much more raw and powerful force. They play virtually non-stop, and the light-speed sonic barrage is overwhelming. Live, they transform from a swirling, art-rock technicolor, pop roller-coaster into a seething, math punk, blistering fury of sound. Hosome is the real deal.

See Also: Experimental, H, HOSOME, Pop, Rock

Japan's Nuito is to post-rock as Fantomas is to metal. If you find that sentence a little confusing, how about this. Think tiny bits of complicated, tempo jumping musical blasts, all linked together by the thinnest of threads. In the case of Fantomas, they grind out a mountain of furious micro-metal. With Nuito, it's more your typical noodly instrumental post/art/math rock, only done on a tiny scale.
Formed around 2004 in Kyoto, the trio blends generous amount of finger tapping guitars with various effects and stuttering drums to form their odd constructs. They use "kaleidoscopic" as just one of the many possible adjectives to describe their own sound, and it's perhaps the most apt. They create a constantly shifting mosaic of angular guitar rock, with intricate loops and obscure melodies that vanish before your brain can even register their presence.
That's not to say they run forward, head down, 110% at all times. They also have many moments of sublime calm, but it is no less fuzzy and slippery. It's as if the band will explode if they sit in one place for more than ten seconds. Yet at the same time they demand your attention, lest you lose all sense of the song. If you can manage to stay focused and aren't practically concerned with being able to sing along, then Nuito will provide you with a wealth of material to dig into over many repeat listens.

See Also: Experimental, Instrumental, N, Nuito, Post Rock, Progressive


See Also: Electro, Experimental, Industrial, M, Merzbow


See Also: C, Coaltar of the Deepers, Electro, Experimental, Indie Rock

There's a fine line between noise and art. On the one hand, it's easy to just plug some things into a distortion pedal and make noise. On the other, turning that noise into something more obviously crafted is something else. When do the blasts of micro drum loops become a song? When do the single note guitar beats form something coherent?
These are the lines that Maruosa walks. On the surface, he's just some beastman rolling around on stage and shouting into a microphone while these washes of lethal sonic daggers shoot out of the speakers. Look a little deeper (if your ears can handle it) and you'll realize that this is all very carefully planned. Sure, the songs sound like Alec Empire and Venetian Snares run at fast forward, but it is all pre-planned and very finely crafted. While it's impossible to tell if there are any real words being formed in this storm, Maruosa's message is pretty clear: there is no message. Everything is destroyed and razed to the ground, pummeled into a fine dust through rage and sound. The end result is a bit like the Maldoror project from Merzbow and Mike Patton, only much less abstract.
Maruosa also provides the voice for the Deathstorm project, with Bong-Ra of the Netherlands being the second half of that equation. With Deathstorm, the songs become even more highly edited, with the occasional syth texture added to the otherwise exclusively drum-based pallet. If Maruosa's solo work seems a little too stark, then Deathstorm is the slightly more "deep" alternative, though no less challenging.
Maruosa has made a bit of a name for himself overseas, playing gigs all over the world, through all of Europe, Australia and the US. With a host of new albums planned, the world might want to keep an eye open and watch their backs for more Maruosa live gigs.

See Also: D, Deathstorm, Electro, Experimental, M, Maruosa

When it comes to expecting the unexpected, Hyacca (literally "100 mosquitoes") has cornered the market. A bit like Midori in the chaotic indie jazz department, a bit like Toddle in the lo-fi indie rock department and a bit like, well, just about anything. Covering heavy rock, indie rock, punk, post everything and even a little new wave, the band seems happy to jump into any style, as long as it is raw and hard edged.
Their songs can shift from soft, tinkering jumbles to full-on distorted rock-outs to something in-between. Utilizing both male and female vocals as well as some totally spastic guitars, the band seems determined to do anything other than stand still. Even to vocals change up from simple singing to all out screaming. Many of the band's photos seem to focus on the large number of foot-pedals the guitar players use and the general chaos of the stage, another sign that the band likes to throw everything they have into their music, letting the pieces fall where they may.
Active since at least 2005, the band is something of an enigma, with little info available either on their site, their label's site or their MySapce page. With all the constant shifting, pushing themselves to the breaking point, it's a little tough to find anything to hold on to. That might be the band's weakness, a lack of any real definition. While a band like Hyacca would never (and should never) try and write a radio friendly pop hit, they could use more of something memorable to keep listeners coming back. They do achieve that from time to time, like on both "ライオット," (which sounds a little like Mass of the Fermenting Dregs,) and "スカイライン," (sounding like the aforementioned Toddle) but for the most part they do their best to push the audience away. Again, that's OK when that's likely to be exactly what their audience is looking for. We'll just have to see what Hyacca does next. It's been two or three years since their last (and first) full length release, a lifetime for a young band.
ライオット (Live)
Official Site
MySpace
Members:
Goshima - Guitar, Vocals
Kajiwara - Guitar, Vocals
Harajiri - Bass, Vocals
Sasaki - Drums
Albums:
Sashitai 2006
Telephone Number (Live)
刺したい (Live)
ヘアヌード
チャーリー (Live)

See Also: Experimental, H, Hyacca, Indie Rock

If you took Zoe Keating, Sigur Ros, a slight dash of Warp Records glitch and a sprig of Shugo Tokumaru's playful, toy-like style, mixed them up and kneaded them into a dough, you might come close to baking a loaf of something resembling the music of one Katsuhiko Maeda, aka World's End Girlfriend.
Most of his work seems to be based around a few well known instruments, mainly cello, piano and saxophone. Yet just naming a few of the component parts misses the whole entirely. His composition are rooted in classical ensemble pieces, but that's just the starting point. Maeda then takes the songs and runs them through modern tech, stretch and stuttering them, adding infinite layers, not to mention percussion lifted out of the standard Apehx Twin textbook. While his early works rely more on the obvious use of computer generated sound, his later work throttles that back in a big way, letting the music speak for itself. The pieces are stark, yet darkly elegant. They have the quiet seriousness of Sigur Ros, yet also a more playful, organic/fantastic mood at times. The incongruous use of saxophone and other slightly less traditional instruments alongside the small string section only adds to the cognitive dissonance.
The musical style also effortlessly shifts, often several times within a single song, from dour classical, to slight jazz, to sparkling piano interludes. Maeda packs each song with dozens of ideas. It's almost too much to take in at one sitting. The songs demand repeat performances, if only to prepare one's self for the oncoming tide of musical colors. The album also titles offer a bit of insight into Maeda's world, Farewell Kingdom, Enchanted Landscape Escape and Hurtbreak Wonderland being most notable. His music does have a certain fantastical element behind it. Something very civilized, yet not quite grounded in reality. Something well suited for, say, a Ghibli compilation like Kira Kira Gibri, Nausicaa Requiem and Kimiwo Nosete, which he does, in fact, appear on (along with the similarly fantastical De De Mouse.)
In a live setting Maeda sometimes plays solo, other times with a larger band. His solo performances seem a little boring to watch, as he just sits next to some gear, playing along on the guitar. With a larger band the songs find a bit more life. Yet Meada's work seems best consumed in the album format, in a quiet setting with either some nice headphones or in a suitably dimly lit room. Whatever the venue, his music is sure to inspire otherworldly visions of greener pastures.

See Also: Classical, Experimental, Folk, W, Worlds End Girlfriend

Sometimes the best way for an established and accomplished artist to expand out into new territory is simply to use different tools, or to use old tools in completly new ways. Painting with a non-dominant hand, working in a completely new media, or, in the case of Six String Sonics, The, reinventing the wheel. Or, in this case, the guitar.
The project of evil genius Gil Kuno, Six String Sonics, The is as much an equipment demo in motion as it is a group of musicians. Kuno had the idea of breaking apart the standard guitar into six individual stings. Each of Kuno's unique instruments is a single string, mounted just like a regular guitar sting, on a thin metal body. Instead of one person being in control of all six strings, Kuno instead employs six people to play one string each. This gives them the rather herculean task of both playing together while playing apart. The sounds and chords created are like nothing and single player could attempt, let alone imagine. It's a dizzying blend of single, chirpy notes, backed by a drum machine and a two man bass.
Oh yeah, even the bass is treated in a new way. It's giant, needing two people to play. One, at the bottom, plucks the strings and the other, up above, frets the notes.
To top it all off, the players are often arranged in odd ways. One in case, all nine musicians are mounted on a giant metal frame, three to a side, with the bass players and drummer in the front. Kuno also runs a unique video feed over the performance, and sometimes dancers are also used to add yet another layer of chaos over the already frenetic mix.
While the live performances are a blitz of sound, their single mini-album is a bit more refined and listenable. While it lacks the total randomness of the live version, it still retains some flashes of pure alien-jams. Where it works best is when the band is working very closely to make something more like a regular song. Then it really does push the bounds of regular guitar sounds and feels more like a proper attempt at something new and not just a big mess of notes.
Obviously, Six String Sonics, The are very much and art-house project and not something you'll be seeing very often. While they do show signs of greatness, it's really just a chance for people to get together and make some noise and call it art,and really, that's not so bad.
Live
Official Site
Members:
Gil Kuno (Unsound, Wiggle)
Ken Takehisa (Kirihito, Group)
Sasaki Hisashi (ex Jam Jack, ex Ruins)
Ishikawa (Group)
Tetsuro (Volume Dealers, ex UG Man)
Murochin (Abnormals, Wiggle, Wrench)
Eiichiro (ex Hellchild, Wiggle)
Isobe (Abnormals)
Numata (NLK)
Matsui (D.M.B.Q.)
cba (ex Surfers of Romantica)
Takada Masako (Nisennenmondai)
Skank (Nibrol, ex Seagull Screaming KHKH)
Fujii (Music from the Mars)
Sakamoto (Wrench)
Ninomiya (Eastern Youth)
Tani (ex UG Man)
Nori (ex Nukey Pikes, Nightmare)
Keisuke (Charm)
Kyo (ex Garlic Boys)
Albums:
String Theory (200X)
Gil Kuno Interview
Gil Kuno Interview

See Also: Experimental, Six String Sonics The

Tight. Tight. Tight! Of the many things one can say about the band 54-71, "tight" has to be first and foremost. Ostensibly a stripped-down rap group, they are in fact a full band. Not to mention a tremendously powerful one. Sure, they might not be huge and thundering with their amps turn up to "meltdown," but they nevertheless pack one hell of a punch.
First off, the rhythm section. Well, the entire band, including vocalist Shingo Sato, is the rhythm section. Together the play in absolutely perfect lock-step. Stripped down with zero frills added to the production, every creek and pop is brought to the front, leaving no room for error. Think a slow-motion Melt Banana. As funky as they are tight, the band grooves hard and long while Sato screams his angry diatribes over the top of it all. Without his scratchy and nearly incomprehensible delivery, 54-71 might be mistaken for a much softer, almost lounge outfit. The music isn't what brings the pain, it's the vocals, for as tight and precise as the band is, they are also smooth and almost mellow. The pounding kick-drum throws off any chance for a relaxing evening, but otherwise there's little to offend in the instrumental department.
In fact, just about every song throughout the band's long discography (they've been playing since 1997) sound very much alike. 54-71 is not about innovation or evolution. That's probably the point, as albums are often structured to blend together from song to song. From one jazzy phrase to the next, the songs flow as smooth as the vibes. The tension is high and the landscapes sparse and grim throughout, with only the very rare Primus-like upbeat track here and there. For the most part, it's kick, snare, bass and a jangly, clean channel guitar with an equally dry and raw vocal track. Over and over, like a fist returning to a face.
The band has, unsurprisingly, won universal appeal, playing gigs with America's Deehoof and Battles. They even recorded their 2008 album I'm Not Fine Thank You, and You? in Chicago with none other than studio great Steve Albini.

See Also: 54-71, Experimental, Hip-Hop, Rap

800 Cherries are a Shibuya-kei style duo made up of singer Manami Marufuji and producer Masayuki Takahashi. They started out in 1995 with an acoustic folk sound on the mini-album Manamidemonade, comprised of simple songs made up of effected acoustic guitars and Manami's incredibly tiny, breathy voice. While this basic approach would stick around through their career, it gradually developed into more electronic territory as the progressed.
Their first full album Piccolo is full of the sort of bedroom 4-track experimentalism one might expect. There are swirling organs, spaced out backing tracks and some shaky vocal performances. The chorused guitar remains in most of them, liking all the songs together into one unified sound. The songs are almost psychedelic in parts, blissed-out and very soft. Their second, self titled album showed very little progression over the intervening two years, being more of a continuation of Piccolo than a new album.
Their real break-out was with 1998's Romantico. This album even made it over to America for a brief time and is therefore their most popular, and rightfully so. While there are still plenty of examples of their original, slightly hesitant early days, there are almost more confident tracks with stronger production. They also stretch out a little with a few electro instrumentals and more fully fleshed pop tunes. They never really let loose and rock out or anything, but they do ramp up the volume a bit here and there. They also mange a few transcendent moments with the softly beautiful "Frozen" and their re-working of "Everybody Knows," original found on Piccolo.
This was followed up with their fifth release Opuscula in 2000. This is more of a mix of instrumental and a cappella, with Manami simply humming and "doot doo doot"-ing along to the atmospheric music. It's till twinkles and shines, but there is very little to hang on to and is a strange way for the band to exit the stage. After that, the band seems to have vanished from the face of the Earth.
While not quite as well produced as Takako Minekawa or as arty as Gutevolk, 800 Cherries walks along the same lines with songs that are cute and innocent with no real point other than to be cute and innocent. There's a warm, nostalgic glow around it all and there are a few really nice gems to be found.
Frozen (fanvid)
Members:
Manami Marufuji
Masayuki Takahashi
Albums:
Manamidemonade 1995
Piccolo 1995
800 Cherries 1997
Romantico 1998
Opuscula 2000

See Also: #, 800 Cherries, Experimental, Pop, Shibuya-kei

If there ever was a band that lived up to its name, it would be Mutyumu. A "crazy dream" is probably the best description for their music. A crazy dream full of fire, statuesque figures, impressionistic operas, delicate ballet performances, leering demon faces...the images are as diverse as the instrumentation and song structure. At one moment you'll be treated to very soft piano and violin melodies, only to be bashed over the head with a massive heavy metal dirge the next. Similarly, the vocal treatments range from almost inaudible whispers to angelic female falsettos to guttural male bellowing.
The work of Mutyumu is extremely artistic and symphonic, yet not overly so. They never stray into straight-up new age territory, while also staying clear of schlocky death metal. Simply put, it's goth in the very best sense of the word. Mature and very sophisticated, classically dark, they never go the easy route of over-the-top style over substance, instead doing the reverse. Avoiding slathering on the gloom, they strip things down to few elements, developing them into minimal symphonies. They even have a few regular rock songs that wouldn't be out of place on a Bauhaus or Buck-Tick album.
Their raspy strings and twinkling pianos along with other synthetic sounds set them apart as something more than your average band that just gets on stage and rocks out. They have extended atmospheric sections that either lighten or darken the mood, like either the sun or the moon rising over a secluded pond. A bit like Matyoshka or Sigur Ros with their trance-like crescendos, they seem to find their most beautiful moments when they're either their most calm and repetitive, or their most loud and soaring. Case in point, the incredible "祈り," ("Prayer") which builds to ridiculous heights over ten minutes.
Having been formed in 2002, they are still a bit young, yet their solid sound and production really hit the ground running with their first self-titled album in 2006. Their 2008 follow-up Ilya cranks up the number of full-band rock outs and death-metal blasts. It's much less subtle and atmospheric, aiming more for the gut with a clearer guitar/drums/bass/vocals format and less of a focus on the strings and piano, though they are both still very much a part of the equation. (Again, refer to "祈り" above.)
Whatever your poison, be it classical strings and high society, or ancient demon metal and flaming pagan rituals, you'll find much to sink your teeth into with Mutyumu's twisted dream-scapes.
眼は神/L'œil est Dieu
Official Site
MySpace (English)
MySpace (Japanese)
Members:
Hatis Noit - Vocal
Ryota Yoda - Guitar
Junpei Suda - Drums
Yuko Ikenaga - Piano
Yuji Hayashi - Bass
Ryota Taniuchi - Violin
Releases:
Ilya - 2008
Mutyumu - 2006
反復する世界の果てで白夜は散る
塵に過ぎない僕は塵に返る


Taking a quick look at his influences, everything from Lizst to Brahms to Morricone to Venetian Snares to Audry Hepburn to YMCK and then taking into account that he's currently signed to Japan's massive Avex label after only a few years in operation, one begins to get an image of the very unique artist that is De De Mouse (aka Daisuke Endo). Indeed, the music that this one-man electro symphony creates is at once very musical and complex, yet extremely childish and innocent, bright and catchy.
While firmly planted in the cyber-soil of today's modern music making software and techniques, something about De De Mouse's '70 and '80 throwbacks make his music seem almost outside of our time. While nothing like Boards of Canada's muzzy, kaleidoscopic walks down memory lane, Endo does seem to be traveling in the same direction. From his excellent (not to mention colorful) album covers featuring young kids dancing with animals in dreamlike landscapes, to his signature use of cut-up falsetto lyrics in a beguiling non-language, the elements of his songs all work to create an idyllic world. Others have described his lyrics as "vocoded," but they aren't. They are actually more along the lines of those found in some of Nobukazu Takemura's work, or that of the popular Vocaloid software that spawned the omnipresent Hatsune Miku. They are totally synthetic, generated, cut up and manipulated through pitch bending software. This is yet another layer of twinkling magic added to the already thick and gauzy blanket of shimmering sounds.
While rather repetitive, the songs do slowly evolve, though not very far. They bounce along on their punchy-yet-pleasing beats, never glitchy or broken in any way (though Endo's first album is a bit more abrasive.) The clockwork synths run from one chord to the next, shifting the entire songs along with them in a rather robotic, auto-harp fashion. The vocals are more like a child singing their own traditional tribal anthems than actual words.
De De Mouse manages to ride that fine line between totally self indulgent trainspotting synth programmers and overly processed dance-pop idols. It's definitely art-house stuff, but its presentation and flat out jubilant, wide eyed innocence makes it instantly accessible to anyone looking for a quick shot of pure bliss.

See Also: D, De De Mouse, Electro, Experimental, Pop


See Also: Electro, Experimental, M, Matryoshka, Shoegaze


See Also: A, Adachi Tomomi Royal Chorus, Experimental


See Also: Electro, Experimental, O, On An Ocean Amp, Review

"I'm probably going out on a limb here, but from my vantage point, this is not only the most brilliant of all of contemporary Japanese bands, but perhaps the greatest group currently operating in the world." -Alternative Press

See Also: Adachi Tomomi Royal Chorus, Ex-Girl, Experimental, K, Koenjihyakkei, Rock, Zeuhl


See Also: Experimental, Goth, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Industrial, Metal, New Wave, Pop, Punk, Rock, Shibuya-kei, Vis-kei


See Also: Experimental, Folk, Pop, S, Shugo Tokumaru
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