179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← back to listing · view thread

From:
Timo Petman
To:
Cc:
Date:
Thu, 17 Jan 2002 09:11:48 +0200
Subject:
[idm] Susumu Yokota
Msg-Id:
<C2256B44.00278894.00@pro45.procomp.fi>
Mbox:
idm.0201.gz
From: "George Williamson" <georgewilliamson@btinternet.com>
quoted 2 lines I was wondering if people could suggest a good place to start with =>I was wondering if people could suggest a good place to start with = >susumu yokota?
2001 was a bit of a Susumu year for me. I bought quite a big chunk of his back catalogue but am still missing a lot -- and although Susumu is quickly becoming one of my very top favourite artists, I will probably _not_ hunt down all his albums -- not too keen on spending huge chunks of money on Japanese-only imports etc. As I bought all the following albums quite quickly, they sort of gel into one in my mind -- none of them has had time to become a firm favourite, so I just give quick pointers to what they contain. [BTW: You can buy most of these albums pretty cheaply from http://www.posteverything.com/leaf/ They even have better descriptions of them than what I provide below.] SAKURA Most ambient of them all. Sparse with each individual track built around only a couple of sounds. Nice atmospheric album that can work very well as background music, too. No strong beats; gentle rhythms. GRINNING CAT More "orchestral", with which I mean that tracks involve more sounds that are layered. Some gentle break-beats and a _lot_ of cut up melody lines played on piano, repeating endlessly which should sound irritating but doesn't. If pushed, I might name this one as my all-round favourite of the albums. WILL (Japanese-only CD) Very different from the above, all of these tracks contain housey beats but I do not think they would work particularly well in a club -- but then again what do I know? If you get to listen to this one in a shop, skip the first track as it is a generic poppy house tune with a synth riff that does not work. Rest of the album is good, though, and a couple of my favourite Yokota tracks are hidden towards the end of the album. Still, maybe not the best album to start with. MAGIC THREAD A sort of hybrid of SAKURA and WILL styles: atmosperic and sparse but with more emphasis on rhythms. This is the album I have concentrated the least on so far, so cannot really say much more. IMAGE 1983-1998 This is by far the least interesting of the releases for me but it still contains a lot to enjoy. All tracks are again sparse, based on melodies played on guitar and organ and not much else. One track contains a sample of people singing a line from the camp disco classic "I Am What I Am" which makes this album not a good choice to play while having guests, unless you enjoy ridicule. :-) In general: One of the things I most enjoy about these Yokota albums is that he makes modern sounding music that at the same time seems quite ageless. He probably uses a lot of the same sampling & cut-up techniques that many recent glitch artist without sounding gimmicky. Some of his melodies are very child-like but not in the irritating, poppy way (if that makes sense.) There's a definitely a lot of beauty to this music. Hope that helps, Timo --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org