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Review: Puffyshoes’ Finally The Weekend

Well, didn’t see this one coming – Tokyo duo Puffyshoes, previously keen to writing songs about fast food and monsters, have made a 19-minute-long album where the lyrics end up the highlight. It’s slightly unfair to categorize their past work as Fischer-Price-market friendly, as the strongest moments of the lo-fi band’s previous two releases zeroed in on loneliness and self-confidence. Yet it’s also easy to hear Puffyshoes singing about ice cream for a minute straight and think “Dylan they ain’t.” New album Finally The Weekend isn’t exactly “Like A Rolling Stone,” but this brief release works because of Puffyshoe’s simple words.

Sonically, the band seemingly stays true to the basement-incubated style they’ve mined since their inception. Finally features simple guitar-drum numbers recorded just as easily, pop songs turned to garage-sale finds thanks to lo-fi leanings. The comparisons roll off the tongue: Best Coast, Vivian Girls, the sorely missed Mika Miko.

Yet Finally finds Puffyshoes edging away from the noisier terrain explored on last year’s triumphant Something Gold, using less feedback in favor of a slightly cleaner sound that, while still a bit choppy, isn’t nearly as aggressive. From a musical viewpoint, Finally is a bit of a step backwards for the two. Whereas a lot of similar “garage bands” coat simplistic pop in fuzz and pray for blog success, Something Gold actually made shitty recording seem vital to the music within, the harsh buzz turning something like “The Scary Monster” into something kinda legitimately creepy, or making the lonelier numbers see even more isolated. The noise acted as a third member, forcing Neko and Usagi to make room for it and work with it. Finally plays it a lot safer, more inclined to Best Coast than anything else.

Oh but those lyrics, out of nowhere to turn Finally into a great listen. These aren’t complex, borderline-concept-album lines that signal Puffyshoes decision to become the Japanese Decemberists, but rather exceedingly simple stuff, mostly about romance and friends. Critically, though, it’s also not stupid as hell, like hearing Best Coast talk about wishing her cat could talk so they could smoke weed together. Puffyshoes recorded ten modern-day haikus that boil away all the unnecessary stuff in order to get right to the center issue. Which, turns out to be love blooming and ending, with a few diversions here and there. This is the weekend after all, can’t obsess the whole thing away.

Let’s look at the lyrics to lead track “Baby Kiss Me,” a song that doesn’t really need to say anything more than the title. It’s one of the sludgier moments on Finally, one of the songs that could have snuck onto Something Gold just fine.

“Baby kiss me/Don’t be shy!/Why do you look so cute/Why do you make me wanna love you/I wanna love you and I wanna kiss you/Don’t be shy!”

The entire thing, captured in about two single-spaced lines. Reading them separate from the music makes them appear overly simplistic – and they are. Yet Puffyshoes make it count, turning simple wants into slogans in waiting. Finally is Puffyshoes finding a foreign lover and realizing they can’t be coy about language, but rather direct and to the point about wants and needs.

Thus, Puffyshoes crank out stuff like the longing “I Want A Boy,” a laundry list of seemingly consumer-driven qualities in a lover (“I want a boy in tight pants/I want a boy in Converse shoes”) that slyly morphs into an earnest wish for a real relationship, the vocals turning more sorrow-drenched come the line “I want a boy/who loves me a lot.” “Secrets” deals with secrets, and features the best vocal-interplay the duo have shared on a recording yet. Even the album’s goofiest cut, “Backstage Pass” (“I wish that middle finger was only for me”) hides a deep desire to just be noticed by someone. All of it very simple, all of it very easy to connect to.

Some of the strongest moments on Finally only require two or even one line of words to make an impact. “Tokio (Dedicated To Gagakirise)” stands as the album’s most fist-pumping moment, behind the declaration “welcome back to Tokyo/It’s a party for you!” Later track “Oh Yeah” gets by on just those two words, while “Jacky Jones” ends up being Puffyshoe’s big kiss-off song, anchored by the biting chest-poke “I don’t want to see your face anymore.” Who needs a long, detailed text message when you can call things off so simply?

Puffyshoe’s end the album with the sweet “Dear My Friend,” a nice pick-me-up after an album mostly caught dwelling on love gone wrong or never gone anywhere at all. Again, the title sums it up – here is a track that basically serves as a letter to a friend, celebrating all the great stuff said pal has added to their life. There is a bit of a darker side here – the reason this audio-letter gets composed in the first place is because of a fight – but ultimately this is probably Puffyshoes finest song to date, a simple celebration of good things in one’s life. It hits like revelation – after singing about imaginary friends and lonely birthdays on Something Gold and spending most of Finally staring at boys who don’t seem to know the narrator exist, peace gets found in an honest-to-goodness real person.

Finally The Weekend shows us a new side of Puffyshoes that didn’t always shine through before. Whereas Something Gold was a wacky YouTube clip brimming with energy, Finally serves as the duo’s personal journal, a collection of deep thoughts rendered simple. It isn’t quite maturing, more like letting one’s guard down. As an album, I’ll take Something Gold over this one. Yet this is Puffyshoe’s big emotional number, the duo at their most human.

[youtube=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EhCYXr0aLDw”]

Self-Promotion Plus: andymori’s Kakumei In The Japan Times

New review over at The Japan Times, this one about the latest andymori album. Check it out to discover why I wasn’t all that impressed by Kakumei outside of the under-two-minute tracks. I will admit that the title track, listenable below, is probably gonna’ be jostling for space on my year-end song list. Shame the rest of the album couldn’t be as grabbing.

[youtube=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zo3rUsggmPo”]

One opinion I couldn’t fit into the review – as much as Kakumei left me wishing for more, I have to admit it is a BIG improvement over andymori’s previous release which a bunch of other publications went loopy over. Snoozer named it the best Japanese album of 2010 but…it’s just such a plod! Even this new disc has these fast-burst moments that give it life…that second album just feels lifeless.

Review: Capsule’s World Of Fantasy

In May, I found myself spending a rainy weekend in Tokyo. Somewhere between trips to Denny’s and the official NHK store to buy gifts for friends, I ended up in Shibuya’s club district, a vast stretch of nightclubs and love hotels staring each other down, intoxicated folks spilling out of both. This district, the name slipping my mind, came off as slightly jarring to a rural-based English teacher who had last gone clubbing sometime in 2010, in the far less buzzing city of Osaka at that. Walking through the dimly lit streets filled me with a strange mix of adrenaline mashed with I-feel-so-out-of-place-here-ness, country-boy me wowed and intimidated by the big city.

I ended up at a joint called Club Asia to watch Yasutaka Nakata DJ. Though the promotional poster for his “Flash!” event should have tipped me off…the famed producer behind Perfume and Capsule wearing stylish sunglasses, placed in front of stark blackness like a catalog model…I realized just how fish-out-of-water I was when the bouncer started patting me down. “Wow, a bouncer, haven’t seen this in Osaka!” I am a country bumpkin. In I went into the bowels of the club, a place that might not have been quite as Enter The Void as I expected but still felt like another world. The interior was bathed in the same blue as a Skyy Vodka bottle. The women appeared more stylish. The place buzzed.

I, along with the people who I came with, went down to the main area to watch Nakata do his resident DJ thing. This, though, had the potential to be special…Capsule’s new album World Of Fantasy dropped only a few days earlier so this event seemed like a de facto release party, a victory lap even. Out he came and then the music started. Undeniably club-friendly music. Battering waves of sound. Something sounding like C-grade M.I.A. The sort of stuff I’ve heard in clubs from Osaka to Chicago.

We eventually went to the next room over to talk.

Nakata’s various projects…Perfume included…have always drawn just as much inspiration from dance music as from pop. World Of Fantasy, then, isn’t a huge shock – it is Capsule’s “club” album, the one tailor-made for Shibuya nightclubs thanks to 128-BPM being the default speed of every track here. Nakata has been spending more and more times in clubs, serving as Club Asia’s resident DJ along with some other places. A cynical take on Fantasy would be to label it Nakata’s peace offering to club traditionalists, an album thrusting away from the pure-pop of Perfume in favor of authentic floor-filling electro-house. I think dude just really likes nightclubs, sees them as an escape. A “world of fantasy” if you will.

Whether he’s posturing or just embracing nightlife ultimately doesn’t matter, because Nakata sacrifices a lot of the pop charm that made his previous work so irresistible in favor of clanging club music. Fantasy is aggressively so-so, a blaring wall of noise going nowhere. Any catchy ideas get chopped down due to overuse, while the more annoying ones get way too much time to drill their way into your skull. This is Nakata making his own Skyy colored club, one where the bouncer turns a lot of good ideas away at the door.

(Before we dive into this thing, lets talk about the two worsts songs on this album first because they are so bad, so grating they deserve special recognition but also not much attention at all. So…”I Just Wanna XXX You” imagines a world where Nakata listened to the last M.I.A. album and decided all the truly annoying parts WEREN’T QUITE ANNOYING ENOUGH that they needed to be melded with the worst of electro-house. And that’s before the part where it goes “move out the way bitchhhh comes in. “Striker” comes next and…this track features a faux vuvuzela yet that’s probably one of the highlights of the song. Should sum it up.)

The title track touches on everything good and bad about Fantasy. It continues Nakata’s long-held fascination with the sounds of the 80s, all Miami Vice keyboards cascading downwards and shifting pulses of bass. Primary Capsule vocalist Koshijima Toshiko coos like a woman intoxicated on strobe lights, clear enough but also at enough of a distance that she starts to blur. It’s a song full of good sounds and the obvious lead single – yet it also fails to go anywhere. For six minutes it just revisits the same ideas again and again. The deluxe edition comes with an extended version of “World Of Fantasy” which draws things out even longer, as if Nakata thought the original wasn’t long enough.

And so it goes on the album. “Keep Hope Alive” and “I Will” shift between interesting Toshiko-centric segments to zombie-grinding electro segments, while the album’s most joyous cut “What Is Love” goes through a few stretches of tedium that are saved by life-filled vocals and some good horn selection. World Of Fantasy’s most interesting moment comes on the three-and-a-half-minute “I Can’t Say I Like You,” which bounces between disco, house and whatever you classify Zomby as.

Honestly, talking about individual songs on this album seems foolish, because World Of Fantasy wants you to remember specific moments. This is club-centric stuff after all, and like a night out you want to focus on the specific triumphs rather than the entire affair. Almost every track here features at least one moment of transcendence, often courtesy of a Toshiko vocal. Speaking of…she’s the clear standout on this LP. Pre-release press mentioned how she played a bigger role on Fantasy but she’s actually not as prevalent as you’d expect…but when she does peak through the layers of neon synth, she steals the spotlight.

World Of Fantasy isn’t Nakata’s first foray into club music…most Capsule albums feature at least one “banger” and even Perfume albums have made concessions to hard beats. Yet devoting an entire Capsule album to that noise is a bit of a twist, one seemingly meant to gain the attention of a certain sub-sect at the cost of the ears of many others. Other critics have written this album will probably turn off the casual fan and otaku who came to Capsule via Perfume. I think they are completely right.

But is that a good thing? Nakata’s strength has always been his ability to take dance elements and work them into pop templates with dizzying results, a formula that has turned Perfume famous and resulted in a handful of great Capsule albums. He mostly abandons that on Fantasy, to make club music that not everyone will enjoy…in essence, he’s created his own club, highly exclusive and serving a very specific clientele. Even this wouldn’t be a problem if Fantasy wasn’t so muddled, more of a chore than a joy to listen to. Props to Nakata for going in a direction he wants to go, but that alone doesn’t mean the music will be any good.

Back to Club Asia…after an hour of chatting, we go back into the main area. Toshiko joined Nakata on stage and they are no longer playing clanging electro-house. They play J-Pop. Poppier Capsule songs, and then he dropped Perfume’s “Laser Beam” and the crowd went nuts. It was an excellent ending to the night, and a reminder that sometimes universal stuff can work better than nice sounds for getting people moving.

[youtube=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4h8m74pyC8″]

Busy Signals From The Edge Of Hell: DUB-Russell

What’s the absolute worst thing you can hear coming from a telephone? A rush of static? “Sir, I’m sorry to inform you…?” A telemarketer? Tokyo’s DUB-Russell imagine the most terrifying noise that could slip out of the receiver would be Satan’s personal waiting music. The duo’s Grasp Echoes album reminds me of the noises a phone would make…if a phones existed in hell. Opener “Metallurgy” goes a long way to establishing this feeling, one of the first sonic elements to creep through being a deep buzz reminiscent of a ringing cell phone. Yet this isn’t just “Marimba” – DUB-Russell soak the track in chiming bells and a thick David Lynch fog. The following slab of fuzzy terror, “Tracklaying,” evokes a more twisted Boards Of Canada circa the already pretty demonic Geogaddi. “14-Layered” skirts closer to Aphex Twin breakbeat mayhem, letting vocal samples get pounded by the clinking wave. Grasp Echoes is unrelenting…only album closer “Ciao, A Presto” offers a little breathing room and even that one has shadows sneaking all over the walls…a brief descent into rattling ambient that manages to unnerve with each song. Oh, and it’s also free, over at the group’s Bandcamp. Just put the phone away before hitting play. Listen below.

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Review: NOKIES! 7 Songs EP

If NOKIES! can learn only one lesson from their debut release, I really hope that it’s they are a group that should release solely EPs. The type of energetic, soft-to-loud rock the Osaka group favors works well in the relatively short confines of an extended play, but could easily turn to exhausting fake enthusiasm if extended by even just ten minutes. Think of it like this – everyone likes little kids because they have this innocence and excitement that eventually gets sapped out of everyone. But sometimes toddlers can be too god damn full of life, driving otherwise rational older folks to insanity. NOKIES! kinda work in a similar way.

Along with Sorrys! and Your Gold, My Pink, NOKIES! are another high-fructose syrup-ized Japanese indie-pop band seemingly drawing inspiration from England’s Los Campesinos! What that specifically entails should be obvious to anyone whose even grazed past a Campesinos’ track, but for the rest it mostly means a lot of energetic guitar strumming, a lot of sudden twists and yelping. It’s an exciting sound – not like an exciting development in music, but a legitimate thrill – when done right, but when done wrong (or for too long) quickly turns grating.

This leads to both one of the reasons some Japanese takes on this style of guitar-pop go wrong – along with all the stuff above, Los Campesinos! can count clever lyrics amongst their strong points. Even when the band turned bleak on Romance Is Boring they could still sneak in some clever lines. Even if the actual sounds the band conjured up started to annoy, they often could salvage the sugar-addled mess with a good line or two. Yet groups like NOKIES! don’t benefit from that since, though they sing in English, they aren’t pulling out witty stuff as much as the sort of stuff you’d slap across a flyer for a nightclub. Look, I don’t want to diminish their English skills…they sound fine!…but they also aren’t busting out any really deep observations or funny moments. NOKIES! gotta rely solely on their sound which…brings us back to this, the 7 Songs EP, about as perfect a format as the band will probably get. Considering they mostly have one gear (“WOOOOO”), this stuff could get lame fast, but on an EP? Just the right amount of time to show off how they are one of the better bands doing this stuff today.

Towering above everything else on 7 Songs is the joyous rush of “We Are News In The Dance Floor,” one of the finest examples of this sort of shouty indie-pop in Japan today. Despite being the NOKIES’! most obvious swiping of Los Campesinos! – this one owes “You! Me! Dancing!” a huge drink – “We Are News” stands as the band’s most energetic moment, a collection of jittery guitars and vocals all peaking at the group-hollered chorus. If “You! Me! Dancing!” served as a snapshot of a nervous youth’s night out turned triumph, “We Are News” plays like a Sportscenter “Best Of Triumph” countdown. It’s young joy boiled down to its giddiest stuff, NOKIES! obvious hit in the waiting if anyone would give them a glance.

The rest of the EP never approaches the dizzying Red-Bull-Vodka whirlwind of “We Are News” but features plenty of similar of pop rushes that are plenty enjoyable. “Take My Hand” teases with get-down funk, but propels away from that idea come the shouty chorus. “Who Cares” drapes some Magnetic Fields-worthy strings over everything, while the piano-driven finale “Our Way Home” closes 7 Songs on an especially high note. The only really misstep here ends up being the plodding “Andy,” which doesn’t actually fail because NOKIES! slow down a bit. They actually pull off sappier fare with the slumping “You Show Me The Way,” which overcomes a subdued pace by sounding genuinely downtrodden. “Andy” just sorta lacks anything of interest.

As this style of whoop-heavy indie-rock continues to grow in popularity in Japan, 7 Songs stands as one of the better releases in this micro-genre, alongside the last Your Gold, My Pink mini-album as well done takes on the style. NOKIES! debut EP also clocks in about perfectly – enough to love, not too long that you want to abandon it by a highway rest station.

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