Showing posts with label Keep It Together Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keep It Together Records. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2012

[Bandcamp] Saisa - 1st EP [2011]


Wow, this was a true find. Jacob from Keep It Together Records sent me these guys. He'll be releasing a tape from them soon, and its going to be great. Saisa have put their first EP up here for free download, and it is a gorgeous thing. When I saw "post-rock" in the description, I was expecting something boring, but Saisa creates some of the most beautiful and heavenly music I've ever heard. The most obvious comparison is Sigur Ros, due to the high vocals and guitar sounds, but the song structures are much more traditional post-rock. It's pretty refreshing and completely unexpected from a small Japanese band. I even hear some envy influences, but mainly envy's more laid-back instrumental stuff and their reverb-y telecaster guitar sounds.

This is just really, really good and you need to get these three songs immediately. I'll update again when KIT has the tape out!


1. Faith In Ordinary
2. Little Light Way
3. Lycoris

Thursday, March 29, 2012

[Bandcamp] Malegoat - To Face the Music [2011]


The beginnings of albums are like all first impressions. That's why another long intro or some spoken word shit is going to make me lose it. Luckily, I can just pop in Malegoat and forget everything. A smile on my face within 5 seconds always speaks highly of a band, in my opinion, and I think Malegoat got a smile in 3. That's gotta mean something, right?

So, I'm going to organize this little talk-about (I don't want to call it a review, cause that requires me to write a certain way) into maybe three main points, the first already being said. The second point is about Japanese bands singing in English. It can ruin a band sometimes. I usually just tune it out when Husking Bee or Staple start trying to pronounce some sort of mangled lyric. I believe in singing in your own language (even though I totally break that and try to do vocals in different languages myself). But Malegoat may pass my silly barrier keeping the non-English speakers from singing in English. It just wouldn't be the same if they didn't. The pronunciation is almost perfect, but the phrasing IS perfect. The vocals are really one of the best things about this. So often with jangly emo bands like this, the vocals are not quite on key, and it just ruins the experience for me. Malegoat's vocals are always on point and go with the music perfectly. You have my permission.

Finally, nothing will stop me in my tracks like a trumpet in an emo song. Halfway through this album, they throw in an instrumental track and lace it with soothing trumpet. It just feels so American Football that they get a free pass to finish the album with some white-boy juggalo trash. For a period of two years, I went to bed with American Football every single night. Their sound has totally brainwashed me. I remember when I was listening to this album for the first time. I was paying attention to something else, but when that trumpet sounded, it was like a dinner bell. It totally soothed me, reminding me of high school. And that's what this music is about for me. It's the sound that I remember from high school, updated to be fresh and awesome.

That's about it. I love this. Keep It Together Records released the cassette in the States, so frickin' get it!


1. Matured Sense
2. Change With Our Time
3. Expression
4. Your Lie
5. Ignore
6. Time Passes
7. Tidying
8. My Blues

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

[Bandcamp] Low-pass - Trimurti [2012]


Guitar wanking, posturing, and showing off was a trend that has kind of come and gone. I remember a few years ago, instrumental rock or metal bands were all the rage. The music was nothing more than an excuse for some dudes to show off how much time they spent sitting in their bedrooms practicing their instruments. Eventually everybody, even the progenitors, had given up on that art form built off of ego. Most of them ended up playing slow and starting doom bands. Cue Southern Lord...

But, there were some mad instrumentalists who never let their skill get in the way of solid song-writing, a focus on what makes music enjoyable to listen to, and creating emotional connections. In the case of instrumental bands, it's almost that much harder, since there is no human voice to connect with. Even though it pre-dates the fad I talked about, No Knife is one such band that uses amazing song-writing to mix their instrumental skill with. Despite the vocals, No Knife's music always struck me as so calculated and carefully constructed in a way that few other bands could manage. They used instrumental flourishes few bands could pull off as a means to create that unique sound.

Japan definitely took No Knife's approach to songwriting to heart. There might have been other bands that strongly influenced it, but around 2002, after No Knife toured Japan, bands started popping up that embodied that fresh, emo-rock sound (like Toe, Nine Days Wonder, Up and Coming, Wound Third Picture). It seemed to channel the Japanese obsession of perfection into an art form and give it direction. And you saw the gorgeous technicality that Americans had trouble copying from No Knife come into fruition in a country across the sea. In my mind, this sound became Japanese, since most American bands never followed it (The Kinsella brothers, Pele, and others notwithstanding).

Low-pass is the latest, and not the latest, of this grand tradition. They take elements of the best Japanese instrumental bands (Toe, Lite) and channel it through a more straight forward rock lens. The aforementioned bands lean heavily on their instruments, not reaching for a voice but trying to let the instruments do the talking. Low-pass instead leans on the strength of their song-writing, not depending on a single instrument to take the lead. In some ways, other Japanese bands feel more like jazz and Low-pass feels more like rock. You can see yourself rocking out to the songs, driving down the free-way, like a proper rock band.

And that's not saying that the instrumental prowess isn't there. Low-pass adds enough "better than you" riffs, drum rolls, and bass lines to make you feel properly insignificant. But like I said, all of this is done in worship of the song, used smartly to create a cohesive, emotional experience. Each instrument drops back, plays rhythmically when the song requires, and then freaks out when it needs to. It's some of the best mix of playing and song-writing I've heard.

Low-pass is released by Stiff Slack in Japan, but we're lucky enough that Keep It Together Records is paying attention and releasing it here. The cassette version, with some gorgeous artwork, should be out in the next few months, but the entire album is available to preview at the link below. As summer is almost upon us (or maybe I should say spring), this is the perfect album to pop in your car or MP3 player and greet the sun.


1. AR
2. Reconstruct
3. Nitro
4. Fog
5. Glide
6. Δ 
7. Landscape
8. Days Over