Rice Music (1982)

Masami TsuchiyaRice MusicMasami Tsuchiya

With Sydney being closer to Asia than it is my homeland (the UK), one might expect to come across more Japanese music in the op shops. But this one, despite being by a Japanese artist, is actually a UK pressing.

Masami Tsuchiya was the frontman of Japanese new wave band Ippu-Do who had a small amount of interest in the UK in the early 80s. How small? Well, as of the time of writing, they don’t even have their own Wikipedia page. Thirty years ago Tsuchiya was best known to me and my friends as the guy who played guitar on tour with Japan after Rob Dean left (he can be heard on the live album Oil On Canvas (1983)). He later went on to play alongside David Gilmour and Carlos Alomar on Arcadia’s So Red The Rose (1985).

Rice Music was his first solo album and should be of interest to fans of that late 70s / early 80s intersection of Western and Asian pop styles; synths and guitars; and the kind of new wave branded New Romantic.

While Tsuchiya is a talented multi-instrumentalist, for this album he also enlisted a who’s who of sympathetic musicians of the era: Bill Nelson (who supplies “flying e-bow” guitar) , Ryuichi Sakamoto, Steve Jansen and Mick Karn of Japan,  Percy Jones (along with Karn, the other notable fretless bass player of the period), Toshio Nakanashi (of seminal Japanese new wave band Plastics).

Musically it ranges from territory similar to late-period Japan as on the closing ‘Night In The Park’ to the more experimental likes of ‘Haina-Haila’. While my current favourite is ‘Kafka’, the track that features Sakamoto. A proto-industrial, scratchy funk number with a bassline that recalls the tuned down guitar of The White Stripes ‘Seven Nation Army’.

Flammende Herzen (1977)

Michael Rother Flammende HerzenMichael Rother

In the eighteen months I’ve been scouring the Op Shops of Sydney for second hand vinyl I’ve not come across much Krautrock. So why did finding this debut solo album from Michael Rother for $1 leave me with mixed emotions today?

Not because it isn’t great. Flammende Herzenn  (trans: Flaming Heart) was recorded in 1976 in between the second and third Harmonia albums and after Rother had spent time (very briefly) in Kraftwerk and, more pivotally, Neu! His Kosmiche pedigree is second to none and this album is up there with the best of his work.

Produced by the equally legendary Conny Plank, it’s entirely instrumental with Rother playing nearly everything on the album, his guitar and keyboard work instantly recognisable – the only other credited musician is Can‘s Jaki Liebzeit on drums ( or “Schlagzeug” as it says on the cover. Yes it’s the original German Sky label issue). Rother. Plank. Liebzeit. Now that’s a recipe for something special.

No, the reason I’m feeling a little less than elated is I can’t help but think that whoever originally owned this also owned some other equally great Kosmiche music and someone must have beaten me to those records at Vinnies.  Why they missed this one, I don’t know but I’m grateful they did – although I’m also thinking “what if I’d got there a bit earlier?”. First world problems, eh?

Anyway, if you’re not familiar with this album it’s well worth checking out. The whole thing is on Spotify:

Michael Rother – Flammende Herzen

or if you just want to try a little dip, here’s track 3 ‘Feuerland’ on YouTube.

In The Pharmacy #29 – Late March 2013

The 16 best tracks I’ve heard in the last two weeks. Lots of old friends returning, including Vampire Weekend, Low, Kurt Vile, The Knife and Laura Marling. ‘New’ A-grade tunes from the archives of Rilo Kiley and The Postal Service plus acid country from Minneapolis, languorous jangle pop form Melbourne, all-female post-punk from London and Neko Case with a tune from the Stephen King / John Mellencamp musical.

Vampire Weekend ‘Diane Young’
The first of two new tracks from their forthcoming third album Vampires of The City, this one is typically quirky and infuriatingly catchy. A blend of electronic pop, a bit of rumbling Link Wray guitar, distortion, and Ezra Koenig’s Elvis-pastiche pitch-sifted vocals, on the “Baby, baby, baby right on time” chorus. This is going to be everywhere.
[Vampire Weekend]


Low ‘Clarence White’
Two tracks from The Invisible Way were featured back at the start of the year (ITP #24). As the album finally got released this week, here’s another one of my favourites, Inspired by a flood in their hometown of Duluth, not quite sure why it’s named after the sometime Byrds guitarist.
[Low]

Savages ‘She Will’

London based all-female post-punk band prepare their debut album for Matador. Like a more visceral Warpaint.
[Savages]

Neko Case ‘That’s Who I Am’
One of my favourite singers with a track taken from a musical written by Stephen King and John Cougar Mellencamp, Ghost Brothers of Darkland County.
[Neko Case] [Ghost Brothers of Darkland County]

Kurt Vile ‘Never Run Away’

Second track from the John Agnello produced follow up to Smoke Ring For My Halo, Walkin’ on A Pretty Daze. Sounds like this will be one of the records of the year.
[Kurt Vile]

Rilo Kiley ‘Let Me Back In’

Some lovely guitar picking and Jenny Lewis’s voice at its most yearning and melancholy. Taken from the forthcoming Rilo Kiley outtakes album, this is head and shoulders above anything on their last album proper Under The Blacklight.
[Rilo Kiley]

Julian Lynch ‘Gloves’

Like something from the edges of the Elephant 6 collective, with added fretless bass. [Julian Lynch]

Web of Sunsets ‘Fool’s Melodies’
Acid country from Mineapolis – sounds like a lo-fi Tanya Donelly.
[Web of Sunsets]

Free Time ‘Nothin’ But Nice’
Langorous indie jangle rock in similar vein to Kurt Vile from New York based, Melbourne ex-pat Dion Nania.
[Free Time]

Laura Marling ‘Where Can I Go’
Deliciously soulful track taken from 23-year-old English folkie’s ’s forthcoming fourth album ‘Once I Was An Eagle’.
[Laura Marling]

Yellowbirds ‘Young Men of Promise’
Fuzzy psych pop from the band that was previously the solo project of New Yorker Sam Cohen.
[Yellowbirds]

Vampire Weekend ‘Step’
Baroque pop with harpsichord. Ostensibly the opposite of Diane Young, but clearly the work of the same band when you drill down to the use of distortion, judicious use of pitch-shifted vocals, treated drum sounds and sheer number of words per line.
[Vampire Weekend]

The Postal Service ‘Turn Around’

As Jimmy Tamborello and Ben Gibbard prepare to mark the 10th anniversary of GIve Up, they’ve leaked this previously unheard outtake.
[The Postal Service]

The Knife ‘A Tooth For An Eye’

Opening track from their forthcoming, long awaited follow up to Silent Shout, Shaking The Habitual. A superior track to the somewhat aimless first single, ‘Full of Fire’.
[The Knife]

GEMS ‘Pegasus’

From Washington DC, featherlight dreampop in a simlar vein to Beach House.
[GEMS]

Peals ‘Blue Elvis’

Instrumental chillout with a south pacific beach lullaby feel from Baltimore scenesters William Cashion (Future Islands) and Bruce Willen (ex-Double Dagger).
[Peals]

Takeaway

In The Pharmacy #28 – March 2013

After the last indie rock-heavy instalment, ITP #28 sees a healthy dose of electronic pop while still finding room for plenty of guitars.

AlunaGeorge ‘Attracting Flies’
These guys can’t seem to do a thing wrong. Their fourth appearance on In The Pharmacy, with another 21st century pop classic. “Little grey fairytales and little white lies / everything you exhale is attracting flies”.
[AlunaGeorge]

Eleanor Friedberger ‘Stare At The Sun’ I didn’t dislike the Fiery Furnaces’ singer’s first debut album, but I did find it lacking in memorable tunes. Here though, the scratchy indie rock matches her breathless vocal delivery and lyrics in both catchiness and charm.
[Eleanor Friedberger]

Little Boots ‘Motorway’ It seems to have been ages since Victoria Hesketh’s debut as Little Boots, an album that failed to live up to the promise of those early singles and YouTube videos. I vaguely recall an underwhelming house-y stand alone single last year that went in one ear and out the other. What a wonderful surprise then to hear ‘Motorway’, which melds classic pop and electronica to great result. Obviously indebted to St Etienne, which is no bad thing. Taken from forthcoming second album Nocturnes.
[Little Boots]

Smith Westerns ‘Varsity’ Wistful indie rock with a classic feel from the Chicago bands forthcoming third album Soft Will.
[Smith Westerns]

Yeah Yeah Yeahs ‘Sacrilege’
It’s Blitz while not a complete misstep, was disappointing in what is an otherwise faultless catalogue, songs and riffs sounded lacking and derivative especially when the previous Is Is EP had pointed towards the band’s signature sound evolving into something singularly their own. So this is not so much a step backward as a step back from inconsequentiality. Although the gospel choir seems a bit overdone, the experience of Nick Zinner’s 41 Strings project seems to have brought a freshness to the arrangement.
[Yeah Yeah Yeahs]

Yacht ‘Second Summer’
2011’s Shangri-La was easily Yacht’s best album so far. This the first taste of their forthcoming follow up album. Catchy Discotronica with a lyric as memorable as the music “can you stand by your man, as the shit hits the fan”.
[Yacht]

Colleen Green ‘Heavy Shit’
Lo-fi punky indie-pop with a post punk edge.
[Colleen Green]

Empress Of ‘Hat Trick’
Electronic dreampop with a woozy psychedelic edge. The work of one Brooklyn-based Lorely Rodriguez.
[Empress Of]

Iron & Wine ‘Grace For Saints and Ramblers’
Sam Beam continues his journey from stripped down troubadour to lusher forms of indie rock, with harmonies and handclaps, taken from his forthcoming fifth album Ghost on Ghost.
[Iron & Wine]

!!! ‘Slyd’
Slippery funky electronica from Thr!!!ler, the band’s forthcoming follow up to 2010’s excellent Strange Weather, Isn’t it?  Follow the link for a free download.
[!!!]

Big Black Delta ‘Side of The Road’
I was expecting this to be some swampy blues number, on account of the name. Rather. This solo project of lo-fi indie rockers Mellowdrone’s Janathon Bates is electronic pop with a 80s Italo disco feel and heavily treated / robotic vocals.
[Big Black Delta]

Roosevelt ‘Around You’ Irresistible electronic dancefloor pop from Cologne-based electronic producer Marius Lauber.
[Roosevelt]

Milk Music ‘Cruising With God’ Noisey indie with an 80s alt-rock feel.
[Milk Music]

Still Corners ‘Berlin Lovers’ Squelchy analogue electronic pop
[Still Corners]

Fyfe ‘St Tropez’
A little bit Beirut, a little bit psych pop, a little bit The National from 23 year old Londoner Paul Dixon.
[Fyfe]