Monthly Archives: March 2024

Omit LP

Omit LP – LP IN-Sec – Siltbreeze

Recorded on an 8-track September/December 2013.

Includes a two-sided black and white insert with illustrations, credits.

Omit’s ‘inSec’ is “new,” but not new. Recorded in 2013, the masters lost in the label’s murky somewheresville that always shows up when moving. For those who don’t know, Omit is an experimental electronics artist from New Zealand’s south island who, since 1990, has released thirty-some xerographed cassettes and CDrs in the Dead C orbit for those who do. It’s not enough to say that ‘inSec’ is an ambient masterpiece bringing to mind a John Carpenter soundtrack performed by the Hub because listening to it engineers new species. 
In this century that flatters itself to be of drinking age, it is a queer thing we haven’t come face to face with aliens.  Besides the xenobiological effects, Omit constructs your sentiment through timbral concepts that repeat and shift with minimal reference to harmony, melody, key, or mode. Streams jump and skitter, knitting tightly high and low in a dense rattling driven to the long and most plaintive tones amongst the countless gizmos (that’s including you, but not “you”). This one is for big fans of Anode/Cathode, Papa Srapa, & Insignia refrigerators. 

$25

Tori Kudo & 3C123 LP

Tori Kudo & 3C123

LP ltd to 400, black vinyl, 2 color silkscreened jacket with obi (grey with particles, textured tan, black and red), inserts and a postcard

No digital / DL version

https://anarchiveslabel.bandcamp.com

https://anarchives.com

Label : An’archives

Réf : [An’44]

Printed by Alan Sherry

Release date : March 22nd 2024

Contact – wholesale : anarchives@sfr.fr – anarchiveslabel@gmail.com – clerouley@free.fr

Distribution in UK : This Ain’t Distribution / Japan Blues

Shop in Paris & distribution in France : Souffle Continu

US : Worldgonemad

An’archives are pleased to announce the release of a self-titled album by Tori Kudo & 3C123. A reissue of a cassette that was originally released on Uramado in 2020, this is the first time this live session has appeared on vinyl. The performance, featuring Kudo on piano and 3C123 on clarinet, was recorded on October 18, 2009, at the Uramado venue in Shinjuku. A beautiful and quixotic forty-minute set, it reconnects both Kudo and 3C123 with various musical histories, including those of classical composition and free improvisation.

The performance documented on Tori Kudo & 3C123 is a curious one. While they both appear to slip into improvised ruminations at times, for the most part, Kudo performs pieces by Erik Satie on the piano, over which 3C123 teases an excoriating stream of improvisation from the clarinet. His playing here is wild in its poetry: sometimes lushly nestling alongside Satie’s melodies, elsewhere loosing Ayler-esque squalls from the instrument, it’s a bravura performance that is matched, in an indirect manner, by the poise and pacing of Kudo’s generous, fluent recital.

When asked about the thinking behind the performance documented here, Kudo explains by describing the historical juxtaposition of Satie with Takehisa Kosugi’s improvised violin as “an essence of the Japanese art of collective improvisation.” The playing here, as within Japanese collective improvisation, is about sitting ‘alongside’ each other, not necessarily in direct (or even indirect) reference, but rather sharing the space; “just being there together,” Kudo says, and letting go of the need for performers to engage in interplay.

Tori Kudo & 3C123 is certainly part of that tradition, and this is where its curious poetry resides; in that ‘third space’ that sits in between, but not directly connecting, the two performers. Kudo makes an analogy with Fluxus, which is appropriate. But you can also hear their shared history here, somehow, as Kudo and 3C123 have known each other since the eighties, when they shared a house in Kunitachi City, Tokyo. Their musical paths have been multiple – Kudo, of course, best known perhaps for his Maher Shalal Hash Baz ensemble; 3C123 as a member of Vedda Music Workshop, and with other Japanese musicians like Koichiro Watanabe.

It’s a lovely album that’s as mystifying as it is direct and beautiful.

26€

Taiyoukoumon Supaparn 7″

太陽肛門スパパーン [Taiyoukoumon Supaparn (The sun,An anus,Splush!)] with Anarchy, Kenichi Takeda (A Musik) , Darthreider, Eiichi Hayashi, Kazutoki Umezu, Meguru Azumino 7″ – チューリップのアップリケ/竹田の子守唄 Left side records

Taiyou Koumon Supaparn was formed in the western part of Tokyo with Masanosuke Hanasaki (singing, guitar, lyrics, composer) as a core member, under the banner of “overcoming the social democratic limitations of Frank Zappa from the left. “They are also known as “Frank Zappa in Omiya.

The “sun” is a metaphor for the emperor, and the “anus” is derived from the fact that Emperor Hirohito, a rare war criminal who was the object of popular resentment, died with blood coming out of his anus.
After that, they joined forces with Yoichi Hirai (guitar), a jazz guitarist known as Japan’s leading researcher on Lennie Tristano and Alan Holdsworth, Nobuo Fujii, a jazz drummer representing Japan, and Kanji Nakao, a trombonist, saxophonist, and rapper representing Asia.
In 1998, they released the CD “Horse and man”. This work, which vividly depicts the corruption of Japanese society from the perspective of a high school student named Noriko, was selected as one of the 100 best Japanese albums at Tower Records Shinjuku. In 2015, They released the CD “Atomic sunshine”, which critically depicts the structural corruption of Japanese society from the viewpoint of an young lady, as seen through the perspective of the Fukushima nuclear accident.
In 2021, They released a double-LP record, “Requiem for Tsuburaya kokichi,” in order to arouse public opinion against the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics. Many great musicians performed in the record as below.
Kazutoki Umezu, one of Japan’s leading alto saxophonists (also widely known for his work with RC Succession), who performed with the free jazz unit “The Life of Taiyo Koumon Kawachi,” which was formed by Masanosuke Hanasaki with Kunihiro Izumi (alto saxophone) and Hajime Kobayashi (keyboards) before Taiyo Koumon Supaparn was formed.
Takashi Nakajo, a famous electric bassist known for his famous performances at Theater Brook, Yoichi Okabe, a famous percussionist known for his work with Rovo, Darthreider and Namichie, conscious rappers who are famous who boasts of outstanding intelligence in the Japanese hip-hop world dominated by right-wing nationalists. This album, which invites gorgeous guests such as Kenichi Takeda, the most leftist musician in Japan, also known who collaborated with Ryuichi Sakamoto,Masaya Nakahara who is known all over the world as Japanese splendid Noize musician.

Only a very few $22