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New Magical Mistakes: “Bright Light” (With Matthewdavid And Illuminauts Remixes)

This, the latest track from Shiga-based artist Magical Mistakes, has been online for a little bit now, but it’s a laid-back number that matches up well with the season, the keybaords and wafting vocals just drifting by all lovely like.

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“Bright Light” also was remixed by two California-based artists – San Diego’s Illuminauts makes it bass friendlier, but Los Angeles’ Matthewdavid shines with his remix, which stretches “Bright Light” into a seven-minute-long introspection, all the sounds slightly muffled and seemingly turned inwards. Listen to those two takes here.

New Magical Mistakes Featuring Jake Falby: “With Love” (Also, Madegg And And Vice Versa Remixes)

Impose Magazine let Erik Luebs…who records as Magical Mistakes, based in Japan…write about the blossoming Osaka electronic scene, and it is definitely a good read, so check that out first. It also comes with a new song from Magical Mistakes called “With Love,” and it at first sounds like typical goodness from the Shiga-based producer. It’s a lovely jumble of sound, enveloping electronics wrapped around vocal moans next to laser sounds only steps away from…the sound of paper being crushed up? Like the best songs on the Special Friends EP from the start of 2012, “With Love” is obsessed about sonic texture.

Though it becomes with something else I can’t quite put my finger on – beauty? – when a violin enters all gorgeous like. That comes courtesy of Jake Falby – here is a video of him playing on a rooftop in Buenos Aires – and it adds a sharp emotional element to “With Love,” the violin becoming the heart of the track as the flurry of electronics go off around it. Listen below.

Fellow INNIT artists Madegg and And Vice Versa remixed “With Love,” and you can hear those takes on it here.

Reveiw: INNIT On February 11, 2012 At Osaka Nuooh Featuring MFP, Daisuke Tanabe And More

MFP. Photo by the author.

I’m moving to Tokyo in April. This decision came together thanks to a dominoes-line chain of events – looming unemployment, original housing plans suddenly up in smoke, convenient apartment options popping up at just the same time. It also came about within the span of a week, scrambling up the part of my mind that can sit down and think out a pros-and-cons list and instead forcing my brain to make a rapid-fire checklist. Good location? Check. Cheaper rent? Check. An actual kitchen? Check check check as my eyes look at the burn marks from a recent effort at making fried chicken.

So I spun my plans around and am now looking at moving company websites. Yet with this decision now cemented, my surroundings have now become sentimental landmarks doomed to become mental dust. Every class I teach is one less before I’m gone and this school becomes just another note. I visit my old home of two years every weekend now, fitting in time with good friends and playing basketball with a mix of schoolchildren and college students before I have to say goodbye. I’ve eaten at my favorite Osaka burrito restaurant three times in the last week alone.

I’m also going to miss witnessing the growth of Kansai’s music scene, especially the electronic music scene that has bloomed over the past year. INNIT, an event aimed at gathering electronic music makers from all around the region, held their fifth incarnation this past Saturday and this edition felt special, a step forward for a young scene. Whereas past parties drew moderate crowds, the fifth INNIT packed up the small interior of the basement-like Nuooh. Back in November, getting to the bathroom situated in the back corner of the venue was simple. Saturday night, though, featured gridlock as folks lined up to buy drinks, looked at array of CDs on sale and listened to CD-Rs folks brought to try and grab the attention of the folks in charge. Long-running electronic producer Daisuke Tanabe, who has had a heavy influence on INNIT, played the event and even gave a special lecture before the live portion started. It felt like he was giving his approval to all those in INNIT as they took their next steps forward.

Magical Mistakes. Photo by the author.

Despite bringing artists from all over the area together, INNIT doesn’t have a defined sound. Rather, each music maker brings their own style to the party, creating a little musical universe valuing individual creativity over anything else. Kyushu-based Magical Mistakes, for example, plays the headiest stuff within INNIT, music often seeking to recreate the movement of nature or incorporating samples of the outside world alongside electronic beats. He sounds nothing like Madegg, a Kyoto student still in his teens, who creates space-ier fare, jazzy touches and unorthodox percussion (sometimes it sounds like clanging spoons) floating in some far-off nebula. Yet both fit in comfortably in this young scene, the pair creating forward-thinking electronic music.

The fifth INNIT party featured some new nooks to their ever-expanding sonic galaxy. A guy named Tomato Soup served as DJ before the show started and, in the biggest musical departure up to this point for the event, featured a singer named Mei who sang over thumping beats while two dancers joined her. Finally, Daisuke Tanabe played a special guest set, seamlessly stepping into the INNIT universe.

Yet the most exciting stuff flowed from the artists who have part of the event for a long time now. Seiho played buffed up versions of tracks from his recently released Mercury, the most exhilarating album in Japan so far in 2012. Following him was And Vice Versa, who has his own release forthcoming on Seiho’s label Day Tripper Records, and who on Saturday delivered a thumping and colorful set that raised my personal interest in his album substantially, his music (which sometimes seems like some of the more straightforward within INNIT) injected with extra oomph and energy.

The best acts Saturday, though, were pure Technicolor wonder. Avec Avec, playing his first official INNIT party and recently signed to American imprint Mush Records, sounded like melting Saturday morning cartoons. He played all three tracks from last year’s Plastic Soul EP and they predictably banged, and those tracks were greeted with Ric-Flair-like woos of familiarity. Yet it was his new material that floored me the most – it’s built around the same Cornelius-like collage of sound meets Lifesaver-colored synths, yet these songs hit even harder while retaining a pop edge. The crowd went bonkers for this stuff.

Closing out the night was MFP, and his set stood as the other highlight. MFP – also with a new album on the way – takes the most inspiration from hip-hop producers like the late great J. Dilla (he honored him, one night after the sixth anniversary of his death, by closing the night out by spinning the Donuts’ track “Bye”). Yet he also dashes in huge, bright synths over his beats, giving his music the feel of coming from the most sensuous video game ever made. His closing set ended the night on an energetic, triumphant note.

I might be packing my bags soon and leaving the region, but I am lucky to have seen what felt like a particularly important event for this growing community. People who I normally only see hanging out at indie-rock leaning concerts, the type who count Hotel Mexico and Teen Runnings as top acts, showed up at this event, two music communities overlapping. Plenty of people I’ve never seen also showed up, making this in my estimation the most popular INNIT yet. Just as important, though, is that the music keeps evolving too, the artists playing that night continuing to create something that stands out in Japan. Up until now, it seemed pretty easy to compare INNIT to fellow forward thinkers Brainfeeder, the LA label run by Flying Lotus. Now, though, that comparison seems silly…INNIT is making music that sounds like INNIT.

Make Believe Mix For January 2012 Featuring Sugar’s Campaign, Occult You And Cloudy Busey

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This year started off on a great note for Japanese music, as so many artists released great material in January. Heck, there is so much stuff not on this month’s Make Believe Mix that deserves more love that it is pretty staggering. Yet what did make it on this 27-minute mix were some of our favorite tunes of the past 31 days. Sugar’s Campaign and Magical Mistakes rep for Osaka-based party INNIT, while :visited’s “Parade Dream” works as this month’s CUZ ME PAIN addition. Elen Never Sleeps provides a wistful break before we dive back into electronic-leaning jams courtesy Occult You. And closing it all out, the gorgeous, lonely “Up To You (If You Love Me)” by Cloudy Busey.

Below is a list of artists and songs appearing in this month’s mix, in chronological order. Click the links to read more about them and find out how to buy/get their music. All artists featured gave me permission to include their music in this mix.

Sugar’s Campaign “Netokano” – New single. Watch the video here.

Magical Mistakes “Running Water” – From the Special Friends EP. Buy here.

:visited “Parade Dream” – From the forthcoming cassette True Chances out in early February. Site here.

Elen Never Sleeps “My Aquamarine” – From his newest digital single. Download it here.

Occult You “Psychic Feelings” – New online release. Download here.

Cloudy Busey “Up To You (If You Love Me)” – Online release. Listen here.

New Magical Mistakes: Special Friends EP

Despite being a staple in the INNIT scene, Magical Mistakes (the project of Erik Luebs) doesn’t live in urban Osaka, but rather a tiny forested village in Miyazaki Prefecture. When I talked to him a few months ago, he said how his remote home gave him ample time to record material, and that the natural world surrounding him was sneaking into his new material. His Special Friends EP is the product of those last few months in the Kyushu wild, a collection of originals and remixes shaped equally by electronics and the outside world. Luebs remixes fellow INNIT member And Vice Versa’s “OOO” and Lady Lazarus, the Magical Mistakes take on her sparse tune adding electronic creases and bird noises. Speaking of our feathered friends – they pop up quite a bit on Special Friends, like on the appropriately titled “Bossanova Groove,” where a bird cackles off in the distance as if it is right there in the recording area. “Supermoon Crashing” adds the sound of running water – a noise Luebs attempts to replicate electronically on EP highlight “Running Water” – alongside acoustic guitar, which also pops up plenty across Special Friends. The digital side of Magical Mistakes remains as solid as it was on last year’s lovely Dislocation, but the natural and acoustic touches on Special Friends lends this album a cozy, personal feel, computers and woods able to coexist just fine. Get the EP for whatever price you want, or listen to “Running Water” below

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