- Cd (musik)
Even a tree can shed tears : Japanese folk & rock 1969-1973
(2017)
Henter beholdningsoplysninger.
Detaljer om materialet
Type
Cd (musik)
Format
1 cd, 1 kommentarbilag
Sprog
japansk
Genre
60'er rock70'er rockfolkrock
Klassemærke
78.7941
Bidragsydere
Yosuke Kitazawa, Patrick McCarthy, Jake Orrall, Matt Sullivan, The Sherman, Kenji Endo, Kazuhiko Yamahira, Sachiko Kanenobu, Kazuhiko Kato, Takashi Nishioka, Masato Minami, Maki Asakawa, Fumio Nunoya, Haruomi Hosono, Takuro Yoshida, Tetsuo Saito, Ryo Kagawa, Fluid Tokyo, Happy End, Akai Tori, Gu, Gypsy Blood, Hachimitsu Pie, The Dylan II
Indhold
Curry riceSotto futari deAnata kara toku eRokudenashiArthur hakase no jinriki hikoukiNatsu nandesuMan-in no kiYoru wo kugurinukeru madeKonna fu ni sugite iku no naraMizu tamariBoku wa chottoAoi natsuTakeda no komori utaMarianneWare ware waSugishi hi wo mitsumeteHei no nu ue deZeni no koyoryoku ni tsuiteOtokorashiitte wakarukai
Beskrivelse
Indspilninger publiceret 1969-1973
Forlag
Light in the Attic Records
Målgruppe
voksenmaterialer
Anmeldelser
fRoots, 2017 November
"This album traces the beginnings of Japan's angura (underground) folk scene. It was an incredible, creative, formative few years from the end of the 1960s, influenced by Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger ... For the coffee shops of Greenwich Village, read the kissas of Tokyo's Shibuya Dogenzaka district, while down in Osaka, a similar, yet more overtly political movement was brewing. Many of the artists that emerged during this period went on to achieve iconic status ... There's an awful lot of cross-collaboration among the nineteen tracks, writing wonderful songs and beautifully producing for each other. Many recorded for the URC (Underground Record Club) label, such as the precocious talent Sachiko Kanenobu, often compared to Joni Mitchell, but whose story and sound more closely resembles Vashti Bunyan ... The booklet notes probably provide more information in English than ever before on this evocative, seminal music"
Mojo, 2017 November
"Japan's vast under-reported (in the West) angura ("underground) gelled around US blueprints, Vietnam protest and its own anti-establishment blues, The core sound was soft rock, from folk to occasional CSN models (...) and (very) mild heaviness ... This absence of edge makes "Even A Tree..." an exquisite, meditative experience ... Your next Sunday morning soundtrack or crate-digging obsession?"