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Category Archives: Music @ja

New Cosmosman: Ananga Ranga

This one announces itself really well…after a few seconds of pulsating electronics courtesy of Kobe’s Cosmosman, a woman’s voice cheerfully says “Welcome to the future!” And then “Radio Menthol,” the first song off of Ananga Ranga turns into a bouncy cartoon number that seems like it should be soundtracking videos of dancing fire hydrants or something. But then a warped vocal sample sneaks in, undercutting that technicolor vibe, and adding some intrigue to the track.

That element – of maximal butting heads with strange – makes Ananga Ranga Cosmosman’s best release to date and the first collection of music this group has released that really makes them standout from the ever-crowded Kansai electronic scene. The highlight is “Unique Fun Fiction,” a tropical-tinged number again featuring vocals that are more mysterious than they initially seem. These would be fun electronic numbers even without that weirdness, but added in they suddenly become a whole lot more captivating. A lot of the programming here seems like it could go haywire at any second – the bleeps on “Flannel Upper Cut” seem like they might pop, while the chirpy voices on “14th Wonder” are actually sorta scary. Even the most straightforward pop joint here – “Lemon Sun” featuring Barako Arato – finds the singing coated in what sounds like dying computer sounds. It’s a big breakthrough for Cosmosman, and one that’s less wacky than you initially think. Get it here, or listen below.

New It Happens: “Track And Field”

Hey, summer going a little too well for you? Having too much fun in the warm weather? Welp, Kansai indie-pop outfit It Happens have the perfect bummer jam to make you wistful. “Track And Field” is an extremely lonely song, just some guitar strumming and downtrodden singing that’s near impossible to understand due to how mumbly the lead vocals are. The description adds a weird element to this…”idol showing her chest on the track and field” – but it is tough to pick up on any idol-pop subversiveness from this song. Rather, it just sounds wistful. Listen below.

99Letters Has Two New EPs: Rosetta And Turbo Drum

Video game noises are no longer just a novelty, a cheap sonic trick used to evoke a decade long gone. Despite several hard drives worth of shitty chiptune music floating across the Internet in 2013, the last few years has seen 8-bit bloops legitimized, to some degree. Crystal Castles cop moves from the Silent Hill soundtrack and can be really popular. Anamanaguchi can anchor their entire sound on NES cartridges and still make an album that gets them invites to big music festivals. EDM, which includes everyone from Skrillex to DeadMau5 to who knows else, makes heavy use of video game noises AND imagery.

99Letters, out in Osaka, started his career dealing almost exclusively in blips and bloops. He was just way better at it than most, creating crushing compositions that were even more intimidating than anything Crystal Castles could put together. Yet now, it looks like the young producer is shying a bit away from his console-loving beginnings. He has two new EPs…Rosetta, out now, and Turbo Drum, out in September…which find him pushing his sound into more straightforward club sounds. And it sounds good! Rosetta opens with a bit of a plodding title track, but it gets going with the second song “Analog Location.” It’s a song that burbles and glows, a mix of bright synths and more aggressive sounds kept to the side. Even better is “Catch Me,” which revolves around a bit of a shattered vocal sample and at times feels like it is going to dissolve completely.

Turbo Drum, meanwhile, sounds like bone-rattling techno music, bringing to mind 99Letter’s early material, but switched over to something without Game Boy influences. It, more than anything else, signals the potential his new turn has. Get both on iTunes.

New CRZKNY: Nuclear/Atomic

One of the weirder things to happen…or, more appropriately, not happen…in the realm of Japanese music is the near lack of music relating to the 3/11 earthquake and tsunami or the Fukushima nuclear incident following it (and still going as strong as ever). I’m not talking about outright political songs addressing the government or TEPCO or whoever the hell…those exist, and like most protest songs, they feel of a hyperspecific moment that might have been compelling at the time but just doesn’t resonate the same in 2013. I’m also not talking about the whole “No Nukes’ music festival thing…that’s activism using bands as a way to spread a message mostly independent from the music itself (with exceptions…which then circles back to protest songs). Nope, I’m talking about how life has felt post-3/11, and how everything that has happened in the aftermath of those events has dramatically changed the shape of Japan (beyond the obvious…think also the jacking of post-disaster national unity into an unsettling nationalism, a shift to the right coupled with further apathy from young Japanese that has allowed the likes of Shinzo Abe to get power…again). A few acts have stumbled into the disorienting vibe of post-disaster Japan…Miila And The Geeks, Neon Cloud…but a scant amount try to tackle it directly.

I get that mainstream artists signed to big labels aren’t going to do that…but what about the under-the-radar scene? Do they not have opinions on anything going on? Have they not been impacted by any of it? What do they have to lose?

One of the most prominent…and best…albums shaped by 3/11 was last years New Epoch by dance music producer Goth-Trad. That collection of old-school dubstep was made in the aftermath of Fukushima, and a paranoia runs through that album that mirrored the anxiety of getting daily updates about the nuclear power plant and not knowing what the fuck was going on. Far less seen were a series of albums by juke/footwork producer CRZKNY. Some were hyper-direct commentaries on the nuclear situation in Japan, while the rest pulled off the same uneasy tension Goth-Trad had. Now, the Hiroshima native (and that’s some REALLY important context) has a new collection…his best collection yet, in fact…called Nuclear/Atomic, that once again doesn’t shy away from the weirdness of life after 3/11.

Again, it’s important to stress this isn’t protest music, the only direct messages possibly within the warped voices peering behind the corners of the music. Yet I have no idea what any of those vocals are trying to say, and that seems intentional – they are the most obvious signifier of sonic disruption, these scary sounding voices breaking through electronic dance songs. The entirety of Nuclear/Atomic is marked by moments like this, of one sound clashing with another, of the discombobulated beat of “Electric Weapon” suddenly crashing into angelic synths that could have come from a Metal Gear game. There is a lot of light vs. dark going on here…see “Swagger,” “Digital Nation Sound,” “Hunter” for good examples…and it’s also CRZKNY’s tightest album yet, the energetic sloppiness of early releases patched up, making for something that sounds great while still seeming like it could fall apart in a second. Get it here, or listen below.

Noah Teams Up With Houston Rapper Siddiq For TWO EP

Nagoya’s Noah already has teamed up with one American artist (Sela) for her first release of the year, and now for number two (which…is named TWO) she’s hooked up with Houston rapper/vaporwave producer Siddiq. Whereas her first 2013 release was a split, this finds the two musicians working together, Noah presumably providing the beats while Siddiq raps over it (except for the whispy “11:30 PM In El Paso (Intro)” which is just some lonely keys and Noah’s drifting vocals). This combo as a whole falls somewhere between the early works of Spaceghostpurrp and “‘N’ The Traffic.” Siddiq is a totally competent rapper, albeit one who is either really easy-going or rapping from behind a veil of weed smoke, though he steps his game up on highlight “Do The Right Thing.” Also, he mentions the Green Bay Packers, so he gets extra points from me. Noah’s production finds a good balance between the sonic hallmarks of vaporwave (could have come off a VHS tape, breezy, ’80s, horns) but never sounds like cheap imitation. The addition of her voice goes a long way, though the way she uses vocals in general (see “Do The Right Thing,” where they ripple off one another) is her best technique thus far in her young career. Get it here, or listen below.