Masayuki Takayanagi LPs

Masayuki Takayanagi / New Direction Unit LP Axis / Another Revolvable thing – Blank forms

Comprised of recordings of a September 5, 1975 concert by the New Direction Unit at Yasuda Seimei Hall in Tokyo’s Shinjuku district, the two volumes showcase Takayanagi in deep pursuit of what he began calling “non-section music” after leaping beyond the confines of his prior descriptor “real jazz.” The quartet of Takayanagi (guitar), Kenji Mori (reeds), Nobuyoshi Ino (bass, cello), and Hiroshi Yamazaki (percussion) deftly explores the twin poles of Takayanagi’s spacious “gradually projection” and explosively virulent “mass projection” concepts across six pieces, titled Fragments I – VI. Originally issued in two individual LP volumes in rearranged order, this bundle LP edition presents in fact the Another Revolvable Thing concert in chronological sequence for the first time, with “gradually projection” pieces on the first disc and “mass projection” eruptions on the second.

As part of his liner notes for Part 1 (newly translated for this edition), noted Japanese free jazz critic Teruto Soejima wrote: “New Direction Unit performances always emit the smell of blood. Fresh blood, never blood that is old or crusted. This is not the desiccated shell of music, it’s sound through which pumps the blood of living human beings. Blood that seethes, that flows and counterflows, that blazes, runs, rises and congeals, blood that vomits and spurts. Vivid, scarlet blood. The ultimate beauty that Takayanagi aims at, is it not the color of this blood? Blood calls out to blood. For these four musicians, playing together means feasting on each other’s blood. It is also a summon- ing to a secret blood oath, to the creation of solidarity with the audience. In the moment, truly, the situation and beauty are instanta- neously unified. To borrow the title of a movie by Kōji Wakamatsu: blood is redder than the sun.”

$31 or 26 €

Masayuki Takayanagi / New Direction Unit LP Axis / Another Revolvable thing – Vol 2 Blank forms

$31 or 26 €

Special price for both volumes = 50 €

Keiji Haino / The Observatory LP

Keiji Haino / The Observatory LP Authority is alive Ujikaji

Ltd to 200, only a few copies

ecorded live at the Playfreely Festival in Singapore, November 2019, Authority is Alive is a potent performance mixed from an intoxicating brew of poetry, philosophy and sonic alchemy. Bearing the theme “The Transparency of Turbulence”, the festival featured a strong line-up of East Asian and Southeast Asian artists and bore the ambition to be “an alternative to how we coalesce and navigate a region that is continuously torn apart by words, egos, greed and ideologies.”

“Everything… living… breathe…”

In an unannounced coupling, Japan’s psychedelic and avant-garde legend Haino Keiji teamed up with Singapore’s art rock veterans The Observatory to deliver a visceral performance. Both have a history of using collaboration as method and it is evident that this meeting pushed all musicians to their creative and emotional limits. Haino, alternating between voice and guitar, was sonic shaman, channelling the raw forces of nature through his entire body. Ad libbing from a self-penned poem, his expressionistic vocals spanned tortured shrieks and falsetto whispers on ideas such as the nature of power, the dissolution of the self and the notion of mu-i 無為 (wu wei, or effortless action). Elsewhere, his guitar workouts were wild and unhinged, pure propulsions of energy.

The Observatory, pared down to a three-piece since 2019, showed off their new predilection for thrilling improvisation influenced by their Southeast Asian roots. Dharma’s use of a mallet to strike his guitar, prepared with metallic sheets and rods between its strings, created moving, gamelan-like melodies. At certain points, in call-and-response fashion, percussive polyrhythms would be exchanged with Cheryl Ong on drum kit; Ong’s background in traditional Chinese percussion brings a fresh take to an instrument typically employed in western rock and jazz idioms. Meanwhile, Yuen Chee Wai sat his guitar on a knife’s edge between control and excess, introducing beautifully resonant tone clusters and harsh, crunchy noise.

$32

Acid Mothers Temple LP

Acid Mothers Temple, The Melting Paradaiso U.F.O – The Obversatory LP Trails to the Cosmic Vibrations – Ujikaji

Edition of 300, comes in a nice jacket. Comes with custom-made foil which transforms the special cover art by acclaimed artist Takashiro Kurashima into a kaleidoscopic trail of electric vibrations.* 1 continent, 2 bands, 42 musicians! Trails to the Cosmic Vibrations is a split LP that brings together two bands from Asia with outwardly contrasting dispositions, while sharing sympathetic resonances.

On Side A, hailing from Osaka, Japan, we have the ever exuberant postmodern psychrock legends, Acid Mothers Temple & the Melting Paraiso U.F.O.! With “Flatwoods Monster A Go Go ~ Cometary Orbital Drive 00∞00“, the band presents an immersive and electrifying B-movie experience of extraterrestrial abduction and interstellar travel, a song that is quickly emerging as a standout on their 2018 tour setlists.

This is the ultimate Hawkwind tribute, an exhilarating 20-minute ride in a silver machine, zipping across dimensions marked by shifts in tempo. Blasting off from the get-go, the band heads for an early climax before bringing the pace down into a funky skiffle at the eight-minute mark. Five minutes later, things just accelerate, and accelerate, and accelerate into hyperdrive – we’re talking upwards and spacewards until we’re some 360 beats per minute, or 6 beats per second… towards infinity!

The 23-year-old band sounds fresher than it has in years, a large part due to its sensational new rhythm section of throbbing bassist, Wolf, and acrobatic drummer, Satoshima Nani. Third new member, vocalist and “midnight whistler”, Jyonson Tsu, brings on board a whacked and outlandish appeal, singing in reckless tongues. We are proud to put this “instant classic” on wax, an epic number even by the stratospheric standards of the Acid Mothers Temple!

On Side O, hailing from the impossible city-island-nation-state of Singapore, we have The Observatory, giants of Southeast Asian art rock. “Vibrational” begins with an upbeat euphoria that gradually turns into a melancholia that sinks deeper and deeper into utter despondence. The song is a natural follow-up from their last full-length, the ambitious and penetrating masterwork, August is the cruellest (2016). This expansive, nine-minute threnody was recorded at The Observatory’s last major concert in 2017, where members past and present came together, alongside an ensemble of 30 young guitarists, layering tiny tremoloes to create emotional earthquakes. Led by the morose tenor of Leslie Low, “Vibrational” is thematically bleak and anti-social, finding escape only in the “legal high” of the bottle – to hell with society and sobriety, it seems.

Featuring 30 guitarists from National University of Singapore (NUS) & NUS Guitar Ensemble

Aw Mei Yu, Chua Pei Ling, Jeslynn Teo, Lee Chun Yat, Lim Sze Hui, Michael Ho, Rebecca Tan, Tan Zu YIn, Tang Ying Chong, Xu Mufangzi, Celestine Kau, Darren Yeo, Gong Zhiqian, Leong Man Qing, Lo Sheng Hong, Ram Janarthan, Sean Ong, Tay Pei Xin, Xie Yang Yang, Yong Teck Hui, Chen Qingyiu, Darrell Tay, Koh Zhengyong, Mochamad Raditya Pradana, Vincent Zillianstetra, Choo Xingyu, Ivan Eng, Louis Wong, Sim Wen Wei, Joshua Tan.

$35

FEN – Otomo Yoshihide LP

FEN LP Imagined Commonities: Live At La Cave 12, Genève Ujikaji

Edition of 200

 FEN is an improvised music quartet. Comprising Otomo Yoshihide (Japan), Yuen Chee Wai (Singapore), Yan Jun (China) and Ryu Hankil (Korea), it was formed in 2008 in Marseille.

The initial intent of forming FEN was not based on a particular pursuit of any specific form of musical aesthetic, but rather to develop and deepen the improvised music networks of Asia. This desire was furthered by these 4 individuals, each with their individual endeavours to organise music-related activities and bridge communication, using a kind of improvisational music vernacular to connect one another. Within the quartet, and beyond, FEN strives for a collaboration that is direct and non-dominant based, while achieving a musical flow that is fluid and symbiotic.

Concurrently, the 4 members are active contributors in the fields of experimental, improvised, computer and electronic music, visual art, performance, literary, curatorial and publication fields. Their creative work is strongly reinforced within the idea of networks and genealogy.

The music of FEN has been described as a combination of noise, random occurrences, rock, free jazz and the likes, in an improvisational rigour without any prior communicated agreement. Each member is free to change and choose their musical instrument and methodology of performance.

$32

Maki Asakawa CD

Maki Asakawa CD ‎– 浅川マキの世界 (Asakawa Maki No Sekai) – Toshiba

Originally released in 1970 with lyrics written by Shuji Terayama, her first album is a brilliant mix of jazz, blues with some environmental sounds. Great classic by a legendary singer

$18 only a few

Takayanagi / New Direction CD

Masayuki Takayanagi CD “Gin Paris session, June 26 1963” Craftman records

$16

takayanagi ginparis

New Direction / Masayuki Takayanagi – Hiroshi Yamazaki CD “Live at freedom” Jinya

Recorded live 25 April 1981 at Takasaki.

Regular edition : $30

takayanagi freedom bonus001

New Direction  / Masayuki Takayanagi – Kaoru Abe – Hiroshi Yamazaki CD “Live at Jazzbed” Jinya

Recorded at Jazzbed, Tokyo on September 27, 1970.

Regular  Edition $30

SOLD OUT

Takaynagi abe Jazz bed promo001

Masayuki Takayanagi – Kaoru Abe CD “Station ’70” Jinya

Track 1: Recorded on June 18,1970 at Tokyo.
Track 2: Recorded on May or June,1970 at Tokyo.

Regular  Edition $30

Takaynagi abe station 70

Masayuki Takayanagi / New Direction for The Arts CD “Free form Suite” Craftman Records

One of my long time favorite !

$18

Takayanagi free for suite

Masayuki Takayanagi Angry Wave CD “850113” Octave Lab

$24

DSCN0329

Sakan & Senju LP

Sakan & Senju LP Sakan & Senju – Les Editions Japonais

Limited to 300 on Japan Blues sublabel, comes in a silkscreened jacket

Senju is a collaborative album between experimental musician Iku Sakan and former Boredoms and Urichipangoon drummer Muneomi Senju

‘Green Journey’ – voice, kalimba, cardboard box, shakers build a hypnotic anxiety, ‘Santoor’ – a cathedral raga leads us into a frenetic freak out,.

‘Senpuuki’ – a meditative Spaghetti Western, down Dusseldorf way.

$24 only a few

V/A LP with Harutaka Mochizuki & more

V/A St.Mirokusunbu [聖みろくさんぶ ] LP Sambient Cafe

Friendly compilation around musicians, engineer & producer Atsushi Noda from Shizuoka…So we have Power of Pleco, Harutaka Mochizuki (with a band covering a Nobuo Ayukawa poem), Konori from Magick Lantern Cycle (yes the band who had an album on Durtro and collaborated with Current 93 many moons ago !)…Piano songs, avant rock, sounds really like a UFO coming from the 80’s.

This is a limited edition of 300, made in Japan, here we have a ltd sub-edition of 100 that comes with some inserts;

$32

Eddie Marcon CDRs

Eddie Marcon CDR EP ” Banka / Hanakikou” Pong Kong

$10

Hanepon CDR EP はねぽん Pong Kong

Solo by Eddie Corman

$12

Dangerous Circus CDR Pong Kong

New project with Eddie Corman, Jules Marcon and Kensuke ide

$15

Eddie Marcon & Ikuro Takahashi  7′ EP “Storobo / Koushin” Pong Kong

$14

Ikuro Eddie Marcon EP

Eddie Marcon 7 ” EP “Shoujo” Pong Kong

$12

Eddie Marcon Shoujo-Fuwa Fuwa Ai

Arayots CDR “Michikusa-Syobon” Pong Kong

Eddie & Marcon (from Eddie Marcon) + Jun Muraoka (from Test Pattern) = Arayots.

$15

Arayots

A

Aki Matsudaira CD Omega Point

Yori-Aki Matsudaira and others Cd “Night Event at Festival Plaza in Expo 70” Omega Point

At the World Exposition held in Osaka in 1970, many multi-media works such as experimental music were presented at different pavilions. Some of the recordings were released on discs, however, the information was lacking what music was produced for what event held at the Festival Plaza. Although many sound sources were lost, we managed to analyze some part of treasurable recordings that were still available!

tr.1 “Flag, Flag, Flag and Plaza of Light” (music: Yori-aki Matsudaira)

The event was a sort of a performance where Gutai members walked around the venue holding various flags that they made by themselves. The music they used was fragments of marches, including The Fairest of the Fair (John Philip Sousa, 1908), and before long it was overpowered by the sound of electronic and modulating music. Eventually the marches were muted, and one could only hear the electronic sound.

Yori-aki Matsudaira commented; “they said, we should make marching music because we walk. So, we span a vinyl of marching music while muted the melody parts to leave only the rhythm section and then improvised on top of this with keyboards. Adding to that, we modulated the whole sound.”

Kuniharu Akiyama, a music director of the Expo, recorded this sound privately.

tr.2 “Pierced Through by Beam” (composer unknown)

The official name of the event was called “Pierced Through by Beam, Mad Computer and Minimal Sound of Rider”. According to Masunobu Yoshimura, director, “Pierced Through by Beam” was named after a concept, in which they would beam a searchlight at the bodies of the audience gathered on the gigantic Festival Plaza. Also, according to Hamada, “Minimal Sound of Rider” was a rock-and-roll show combining a motorbike show and a performance of Yuya Uchida & Flower Travellin’ Band.

At Matsudaira’s home, there were about three tapes of recorded material for “Pierced Through by Beam” however Matsudaira did not produce this material.

Although it is unknown how this material was used in “Pierced Through by Beam”, Matsudaira might have controlled live electronics using these tapes as a foundation similar to the way he performed for “Flag, Flag Flag and Plaza of Light”

Regular  edition $22

matsudaira cd

Onnyk CD “Early Electronic Works” Omega Point

2 tracks recorded in 1976 & 1983

 “A late friend of mine, two years elder than me, he bought the synthesizer for first public use, made in Japan, SH 1000. He rented me it when I was 18 years old.
For I was so interested in making strange sound, the synthesizer was the gospel. I was blamed by my family since I had ever researched to make highly strange sound from ordinary instruments or usual utensils day and night.

I got the usual radio cassette recorder which could over dubbed on the recorded tape only once, and I began to try experimental recordings. Also, I liked the howling noise between the microphone and the speaker, particularly with using some electronic effectors. Controlling them made the various howling patterns. I made some cassettes with these howling.
Also, I made many over-dubbed sounds by using the synthesizer which could produce only single note.

Maybe when I was 20 or 21 years old, I mixed them together. As still I had no mixer, I did it with 3 cassette recorders through the headphone outputs and the microphone inputs. So the different sounds were recorded in left and right channels. If I need to listen to mixed ones, I play some in monaural. I think this idea was great to record the different music to the left and the right channel to use the limited recording time of the cassette as double volume. The result is track1.

Track 2 was recorded directly into cassette deck from the loop of the effectors without microphone. So, I missed the uncertain but subtle effects’ changing of the position and the angle (so called spatial effect) of microphone.
The loop of the effectors was regarded as the performance and as the installation. Controlling each effector was a kind of playing. However the sound from the loop changed automatically, maybe by the consumption of batteries (I never used the AC adoptors).” – from liner note

CD $17

Onnick cd002

Gap 2CD “Practical concert” Omega Point

GAP is an improvisation group which was founded by Kiyohiko Sano, Masaru Soga and Masami Tada in the Mid 1970’s. Now, there are not so many people who could remember their name but since they performed a gig after 40 years in 2017, their unknown sound source was rediscovered by the world. From the early time, they played oscillators and synthesizers, adding to simple self-made instruments, and made a free improvisational performance which is comparable to Taj-Mahal Travellers. Especially for Tada who was under tutelage of Takehisa Kosugi, GAP was a missing-link which lead him from East Bionic Symphonia to Marginal Consort.

$32

gAP 2cd002

Joji Yuasa CD ” Music for Experimental films” Omega point

track 1: Andy Warhol : Re-Reproduction (1974) 19’41″track 2: Autonomy (1972) 11’38″track 3: Document of The Long White Line (1960) 12’54”

Many avant-garde composer had made sound tracks for experimental film maker Toshio Matsumoto. This CD consists of Joji Yuasa’s three musique concrete works for his 60-70’s short films – Broken meaningless words of “Andy Warhol : Re-Reproduction”, electronic sound and collage with chamber orchestra for obscure an earliest work “Document of The Long White Line” and strange concrete sound of “Autonomy”.

$22

joji yuasa music

Toshi Ichiyanagi CD “Music for Tinguely” Omega Point

Music For Tinguely was composed in 1963, Appearance in 1967, Music For Living Space in 1969. With John cage & David Tudor, it’s a blast !

$22

ichiyanagi tinguely

Kosai Hori “Reading-Affair” CD+booklet
OMEGA POINT/Japanese Art Sound Archive OPS-002

Texts are in Japanese and English, limited to 150 copies. Collaboration work with Japanese Art Sound Archive.

Born in 1947 in Japan. This collection is the first selection of Hori’s sound works from the 1970s, a time in which he organized an art movement called Bikyoto REVOLUTION Committee – Bijutsuka Kyoto Kaigi [Council of artists for a United Front] (also known as Bikyoto) – together with artists like Naoyoshi Hikosaka, Nobuo Yamanaka and Yasunao Tone. In those days, Hori’s performance pieces employed various media such as tape recorders, typewriters and video cameras. Texts are in Japanese and English, limited to 150 copies. Collaboration work with Japanese Art Sound Archive.

tr.1 MEMORY-PRACTICE (Reading-Affair)
On the table is a newspaper of the day, which the pair alternatively read up letter by letter. Their voice is played by the two tape recorders with a little delay. The sound from the devices is picked up by the microphone and taken into the loop again with a delay. As this process repeats, the voices of the performers are, as it were, accumulated in the space. As time goes on, the howling from the sound equipment becomes increasingly louder.

tr.2 ACT No.3
A man reads aloud from a book clause by clause, with the recorded word “REVOLUTION” in Hori’s voice inserted after each clause. Heard in the sound recording of this performance are Akugenta’s voice, Hori’s voice, the operating sound of the cassette tape recorders, and loud traffic noise from outside. Through an open window on the venue, the circular expressway of Tokyo could be seen.

tr.3 REPORT Vol.3
The work has the subtitle: “1500km Drive.” On a motorbike, Hori headed from Tokyo towards the north, driving around Tohoku areas all day long while recording the sound of the ride until he came back to Tokyo again. Then he exhibited the motorbike over a white fabric laid in the exhibition venue, while an actor with his face painted in white rode it performing a pantomime of driving. In addition, Hori placed a tape recorder in an adjoining room to play the recording of his ride. The audience gathered in that room to listen to the sound.
The title “REPORT” [“Chousho” in Japanese] is taken after the novel of the same name by Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio. However, the word also refers to the written records that the police make when investigating suspects, which Hori described as the “most alienated empty mark of a person.”

tr.4 REPORT Vol.4
In Report Vol.4 shown at “Artists to-day ‘73,” Hori again recorded his own voice, speaking up what he saw on the way from his home to the venue. Once he arrived at the venue, he put a cassette tape recorder on a podium to play the recorded sound at a low volume and left the place.

tr.5 MEMORY-PRACTICE (Reading-Affair)
This performance used a tape-delay system similar to the one used in his 1977 piece, as well as the same fabric, but this time Hori himself appeared as one of the two performers with his face painted in white. Also, instead of newspapers and books, this reenactment used the testimonies of the perpetrators of the Asama-Sanso incident of 1972, the Sakamoto family murder by Aum Shinrikyo in 1989 and the Kobe child murders of 1997, which the pair read aloud alternatively clause by clause.
(Each track is an excerpt from the original tape.)

$32 only a few, no restock

Kosai Hori Kosai Hori 3 Kosai Hori 3

Toshi Ichiyanagi CD “Computer Space” Edition Omega Point

Obscure tape music of Japan 23

Two sound compositions discovered at Mr. Ichiyanagi’s home in 2018 to be released for the first time ! One is an unknown early work created on a computer and the other is material for an experimental short film by Toshio Matsumoto. Particularly, the former piece was revolutionary. The quirky sound he made on the computer at the time was unheard of especially because a computer could only create simple sounds then. Moreover, it also includes an unknown electronic ambient piece reminiscent of a bi
rd tweeting as well as a reissued version of an accompanying single of a mythical self-published book, which inspired Yoji Kuri’s animation work known as “Tragedy on G string”!

1_Toshi Ichiyanagi Computer Space / 1970_3’12”
2_Toshi Ichiyanagi material of Metastasis (a) / 1971_0’39”
3_Toshi Ichiyanagi material of Metastasis (b) / 1971_0’34”
4_Toshi Ichiyanagi title and year unknown (a) _7’25”
5_Toshi Ichiyanagi title and year unknown (b) _7’18”
6_Toshi Ichiyanagi For String #2 + Stanzas (1961, simultaneous performance)_15’55”
– Yoko Ono participated in performance

$20

new1 1812583-wallet 2018.12.17

Takehisa Kosugi CD

Takehisa Kosugi CD “Catch Wave ’97” Super Fuji

$20

Kosugi catch wave 97001

Eternal Womb Delirum CD

Eternal Womb Delirum # 1CD Super Fuji

Between Lost Aaraaf & Les Rallizés Dénudés !!!

Eternal Womb Delirum was formed around the members after the dissolution of Lost Aaraaff. Released for the first time in 45 years since editing the tapes of live performances and studio sessions that have been held for 1 year since 1974.
Their sound stimulated the five senses and tried to portray a future that could not be known with the magic of sound.

 EX -Lost Aaraaf  + Rallizes Dénudés memebers  + Ryuichi Sakamoto

1.The Awakening and Illusion Returned to the Womb [36:08]
Sep. 16, 1974 Tokyo Roppongi Theater
Kazuaki Arita (Key), Ryuichi Sakamoto (Pf), Saito (B),
JUN of long hair (G) , Hiroyuki Takahashi (Per)

2. After All [12:49]
Nov. 1975 Tokyo Shibuya Adan Studio
Hiroshi NA (Vo, B), Hiroyuki Takahashi (Ds), etc.

3. Cloud Pillar [22:37]
Dec. 1975 Tokyo Shinjuku
Hiroshi NA (Vo, B, Key), San-chan (G), Hiroyuki
Takahashi (Ds)

if you are in Japanese underground, this is probably one of the most unexpected document from the mid 70’s.

sold out

Eternal womb deli001   eternal womb back

V/A “Tokyo Flashback P.S.F. ~Psychedelic Speed Freaks~”

2CD  (22 tracks) Super Fuji

Hideo Ikeezumi, who passed away at the end of February, established the legendary record label, P.S.F. Records. Since the 1980s, the label reigned supreme over the Japanese underground, acting as a home to a large number of unique artists and releasing over 200 titles. Countless numbers of Japanese artists were able use their P.S.F. releases to gain international exposure, and the label’s releases attracted attention from avant-garde music fans around the world. Ikeezumi also ran Modern Music, a shop whose stock selections ignored popular trends like New Wave and were based solely on its owner’s instincts and taste This compilation album is released as a tribute to Hideo Ikeezumi and is comprised of unreleased tracks donated by P.S.F artists.

Disc 1 1. White Heaven ‘OUT’ 2. Kazuo Imai ‘Delay 160715’ 3. Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O. ‘Pink Lady Lemonade’ 4. maher shalal hash baz ‘ikeezumi-san’ 5. Kim Doo Soo ‘Wild Flower’ 6. .es ‘Akatsuki No Uta’ 7. à qui avec Gabriel‘has come’ 8. Shizuka ‘Lunatic Pearl’ 9. Masayoshi Urabe ‘Alto Saxophone Solo’ 10. Keiji Haino‘Tozakariwashinai’ 11. Overhang Party ‘Now Appearing! Naked Existence’

Disc 2 1. Keiko Higuchi ‘Nothing Is Real 002’ 2. Ché-SHIZU ‘Emperor’, ‘Notify’ 3. High Rise ‘Outside Gentiles’ 4. Reizen ‘Untitled’ 5. Ghost ‘Blue Link’ 6. hasegawa-shizuo ‘Low Blues’ 7. Fushitsusha ‘Omae’ 8. Makoto Kawashima ‘Madokarano Kagayaki’ 9. Go Hirano ‘For Rains’ 10. Niseaporia ‘Sora no Ao ni Somazu Utau’ 11. Hideaki Kondo ‘Bach: Sonata #1 In G Minor For Solo Violin, BWV 1001 – 1. Adagio’

$25

Tokyo Flashback PSF 2

LP NWW – Ranta- Heemann

V/A Au Delà LP – Meakusma

Au-Delà is a reflection upon the collaboration between La Scie Dorée and Meakusma.
Tracks selection and photo assemblage by Timo van Luijk of La Scie Dorée. So we have some tracks by Circae (Andrew Chalk), Michael Ranta, Af Ursin, Nurse with Wound, Jac Berrocal & Vincent Epplay, Raymond Dijkstra, Bart De Paepe

only a few copies $20

Au delà