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Category Archives: Music @ja

Fufillingy Stuffed: Tofubeats’ Lost Decade

Tofubeats doesn’t really bother introducing himself on Lost Decade, his first original album out on a major label. He’s been kicking around the Japanese music scene since 2006, grabbing attention for his indie-level beats and his work with mainstream J-Pop idol groups like Lyrical School (formerly sex-toy-sponsored Tengal6) and 9nine. Even though this will be his first collection of money available across the country in major music outlets, the Kobe producer realizes he has a large enough fanbase that he doesn’t have to make THAT big a splash. Rather, he approaches Lost Decade like a challenge – on a major label now, how much can he fit into one album? How many guests – from rappers he’s worked with for years to pop stars – can he cram onto one disc, presumably on his label’s dime? The answer to both is A LOT.

Lost Decade goes full stuffed-crust-deluxe pizza, holding nothing back over the course of it’s hour-plus playing time. The album is split between solo songs and ones with featured spots. Sonically, Tofubeats shuns a singular sound instead of celebrating all of his influences in flurries – he’s most indebted to hip-hop production, but he isn’t skimping on the rest of his record collection here. This is a packed album, one that can be a slog at a times and too dependent on its guests, but also has a knack for showing what Tofubeats can do himself…especially with major-label money behind him

The production across Lost Decade is strong, among the best work Tofubeats has recorded. Pinning his approach down isn’t a simple task…something something hip-hop…but over the course of this album he shows a few constants. He veers towards the synth heavy, and his percussion tends to sound built for a tropical party. He often speeds the music up to ridiculous levels, and often puts the vocals through similar manipulation (see the skippy “I Don’t Care,” one of the disc’s finest cuts). He does laid-back grooves well, exemplified by “All I Wanna Do,” but equally excels at the frantic on “Time Thieves.” His best song, though, remains the one that forces him to build – “Synthesizer,” originally out last year, staggers thanks to a slow rise that pays off by the end with a dizzying hook. It’s Tofubeats at his most dramatic.

But at least half of this album puts equal emphasis on his guests, who are more of a mixed bag. The big revelation on Lost Decade is that Tofubeats has a knack for creating pop music ideal for women to sing over. Seira Kariya provides the vocals for “So What!,” the album’s biggest pop moment, a retro-J-Pop-tinged number that’s all triumphant high kicks and guitar solos that somehow come off as totally natural. Tofubeats has been caught up in the J-Pop game for awhile now, but this sounds like a breakthrough for him on that front. Nanba Shiho swings by for the title track and provides pleasant enough singing over a piano-heavy track. The rappers, meanwhile, are a bit harder to place. Some, like cotton-mouthed ERA, are love-it-or-hate-it types, and his appearance on the otherwise nocturnal-pool-swim of a song is tough to read. Sky-Hi does an admirable job keeping up with the trap-turned-technicolor madness of “Fresh Salad,” but the rest of the rap “featuring” spots seem like dudes intruding on a quality beat I just want to hear alone.

Lost Decade is too crowded and, at times, too scattershot to reach the levels of a truly great album. Yet as a sandbox for one of the more talented young producers in Japan to play around in – and create some staggering sandcastles, like “Synthesizer,” “I Don’t Care” and “So What!,” – it’s a winner. It might not be the easiest album to sit through, but it’s packed with great moments. Listen to the whole thing below.

Intrigue Galore: Tonight? : “hby beer beer”

Honestly, I’m still not sure how this grabbed my attention. Was it the name of the band and song, neither of which really make any sense? Was it their minimalist Bandcamp, featuring just this one song and with a header that’s nothing more than an e-mail address? The track at the center of all this, “hby beer beer,” didn’t sound particularly gripping – it sounded like home-recorded indie-pop, nothing more than some guitar, drums and keyboards played relatively straightforward. Yet then I focused on the details, and the reason why Tonight? intrigue me so is all in the little places. The lead vocals get just a dab of echo, but this effect goes a long way to making this song stand out. That voice ends up being the key – it rises and falls unexpectedly, adding an emotional urgency that sneaks up on you. The girl-group swagger on display sounds nice enough…but not as good as the finale, where multi-tracked vocals sing over one another, a lovely little twee chorus. I don’t know a thing about these guys, but I like them. Listen below.

Something Isn’t Right: Oven Toast Jam’s “Dreamy Acidiary”

This didn’t need to be fucked around with. Producer Oven Toast Jam could have played this song straight, just crafted a beat orbiting around that acid-smeared throb and those ghostly vocals in the back, also letting those occasional piano notes float to the top. It would have been a more than serviceable beat.

Thankfully, Oven Toast Jam does fuck around with “Dream Acidiary,” and takes it to a place far more interesting. All sorts of unsettling details get added to the mix – the sound of footsteps at the beginning, what sounds like a bell or gong at various points, all sorts of electronic bleeps that come in for a second or two and just make this a head trip – and these touches add a level of intrigue to the song, bringing to mind Osaka’s similarly minded (albeit more dramatic) duo RAPUNZEL8083. Yet the real triumph hear is Oven Toast Jam’s decision to warp the beat at various points, throwing the whole song out of whack but adding a confrontational edge to this song – it practically stops you and stares right at you. Listen below.

New Picnic Women: I Can See EP

Few sounds get me more ramped up than that skittery “PICNIC WOMEN” sample that pops up in every song the Japanese footwork creator makes. Doesn’t matter what comes before or after (though that also tends to be good) – when I hear those four syllables, I get excited. Seiho played a Picnic Women song at his set at SonarSound and when that call signal came on, the crowd (and, uh, especially me) went nuts.

Welp, dude’s back with a new trio of songs, the I Can See EP, and those tracks include his trademark voice saying his name, so I’m already a happy clam. Opener “I Can See” begs the question “can a footwork track be TOO busy,” with the answer being a resounding yes…the main vocal sample seems awkward against the pace, and Picnic Women tries to fit too many elements into this when he should have focused on making the main hook sink in a bit deeper. Far better is the following track “H.A.R.D.,” which goes about things a bit more bare bones and features one of the most thumping beats Picnic Women has ever laid down. The best, though, is closer “No No No,” which is classic Picnic Women – boogie-ready electronics wilding out around a chipmunked vocal sample, the whole thing sounding deliriously fun, drunk before even getting to the party. Listen below, or get it here.

Muffled Twee: Old Lacy Bed’s “Little Girl”

This one isn’t new per se…it came out on a Dead Funny Records compilation back in January…but now it comes with a new, glasses-stomping-good video that allows us to give it props all over again. Old Lacy Bed are one of the many bands in today’s crowded twee scene who are more concerned with properly honoring the past than pushing forward, trying to capture a specific sound (here, 90’s semi-fuzzy take on indie-pop). It’s simple but effective, Old Lacy Bed turning a simple repeated chorus of “ah ah ah” into a very catchy hook. If you’ll allow me to throw shade for a second…I wish bands like Old Lacy Bed could get more attention rather than the boring as hell (and dude filled) indie bands that somehow get the call up here. Watch above.