Showing posts with label Tetola93. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tetola93. Show all posts

Monday, December 15, 2014

Best of 2014

2014 was an interesting year in Japanese music. This year was the most active ever for my label, MeatCubeLabel. Five out of the 6 releases were Japanese bands, and in my opinion were some of the best being released anywhere.

We also saw more Japanese underground music being released outside of Japan, with the Blue Friend LP being released by Dog's Knight Productions in England, Heaven in Her Arms/Cohol split LP from Moment of Collapse Records in Germany, and several Japanese releases from the now-defunct Keep It Together Records (USA) and Imminent Destruction Records (UK). All in all, a banner year for Japanese music and 2015 looks to be even better!

Before we move on, thought, let's take a look back at some of the best releases from this year. This is totally my opinion, so don't be offended if your favorite release isn't on here.

1. Tetola93 - Self-Titled



It should make sense that a record I sunk a crap-ton of cash into this year is the same that I loved the most. I've been watching Tetola93 since around 2011 when I first heard them, and I'm thankful that I was able to help get this out. This album is Tetola93's final output, re-recording some of their best songs and adding in a few new ones. From start to finish, it is breath-taking, with a focused originality that few bands have these days. Taking queues from German emo-violence bands and Japanese epic screamo bands, Tetola93 create a unique sound entirely their own. For that reason, I suspect that a lot of people won't truly get what they're doing. That's always the case with bands breaking new ground, I guess. Years later, people might actually appreciate or copy what they're doing, but for the present only a few of us will recognize the best album of the year for what it is.

Listen:

Buy:

2. Isolate - Hibinokoto



Since Isolate's first mind-blowing EP, they've constantly evolved with each output. That first EP was so good and focused, that with their subsequent release's exploration of a more atmospheric sound, I was a little bit lost. This album, their first full-length, pulls it all together. Isolate has truly harnessed their exact sound and they ruthlessly drag the listener through 14 tracks of their madness. I was so excited for this, I pre-ordered it from Japan, and it totally blew me away. Typically Japanese bands have a certain type of recording quality, a certain type of song-writing, and this is what I love about Japanese music. With this album, Isolate has really split from their country and created something that is quite place-less. The recording quality is claustrophobic and punishing, the melodies occasionally nostalgic, like most Japanese bands, but also bizarre and frightening. The entire album feels extremely focused and cohesive. With an album like this, I really think that Isolate has potential to break out in the world. Irregardless, if you don't get this, you're missing out on the cutting edge of heavy music.

Listen:

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Buy:

Amazon USA (Digital)

3. Fog / Weave split



I'm not sure I can communicate how important Bluebeard was/is to me. When I was studying in Japan, I'd listen to their Self-Titled EP over and over and over. It was essentially flawless, and it became irremovable from my experience in Japan. It had a certain style heavily influenced by late-90's US emo, but added fascinating guitar work and a more epic song structure. 12 years later, several bands are starting to show a strong influence from Bluebeard, and I couldn't be happier.
Here we have a split album showcasing two of the best emo bands in Japan. Both are showing some Bluebeard influence, but have such strong song-writing they don't sound derivative or boring. The bands share every other track, so both sounds are interwoven on a single listen. Usually this approach can be pretty painful when one band is weaker than the other or if the genres are too disparate. But this split is the exception where both bands are similar enough that they play on the same emotions but different enough that each one is unique.
Fog is from Kyoto, and this is their first proper release. Their songs are truly magnificent. Their early sound was more screamo, and you can tell they have a tendency to get aggressive and epic in their tracks. Looking forward to more from them, for sure.
Weave is from Tokyo and this is their first follow-up after their excellent 2013 full album. They continue to show that they are one of the best emo bands in Japan right now, with a solid and consistent sound. Three tracks that definitely up the quality over their album.

Listen:

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4. Zdzis Law / Herlens split



Zdzis Law's 2011 demo was a revelation. I hadn't heard a Japanese shock me so much since Tetola93 (not a long time, sure) and I listened to the 5 tracks over and over. Super tight emo-violence that rivaled anything coming out in the world. That's one of the main reasons I was so damn hyped for this split. New Zdzis Law tracks! Only 3 years later, haha....
Well, the Zdzis Law songs do not disappoint. Five tracks here that are impossibly fast and precise with tons of passion. They do take some liberties in the tracks to expand on their sound that I find a little out of place, but I wouldn't say it ruins any of the songs.
Herlens is definitely a surprise on the last part of this split. From Osaka, I've heard their name for some time but somehow thought they were a pop punk band (not that there's anything wrong with that, John). Their 5 tracks here are definitely not pop punk. They're more of a mix of Japanese epic screamo and a tinge of emo-violence. It's hard to place them, but they definitely play solid, heavy screamo.

Listen:

Buy:

5. Heaven In Her Arms / Cohol split



This LP release was a wonderful surprise, coming from Germany's Moment of Collapse Records. I already had the CD from it's initial release in 2013, but vinyl is always more welcome.
Heaven in Her Arms. You've all heard them, you all love them. Here are three new songs that are more brutal and post-rocky than ever before. It's nice to see their style continuing to develop. It seems like they are really taking a lot of influence by blackened screamo like Celeste. I only wish there was less post-rocky songs (only one of the three tracks even has vocals).
Cohol's songs really impress on this split. Cohol has been around for over ten years now, and in that time has developed a completely unique metal sound that takes a lot from the Japanese screamo scene (guitarist/vocalist Itaru was also in The Black Line Fever and Henoa). These three tracks capture the oppressive viciousness that the band has always been searching for.

Listen:

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6. Asthenia / Blue Friend / Calculator split



Released in conjunction with the Calculator tour of Japan in August 2014, hosted by Blue Friend & Asthenia, this split CD sees the best songs from all 3 bands on one release. Blue Friend presents two tracks that weren't on their 2014-released album. Honestly, I like these songs better than anything on the album. They feel much more confident in their sound and are more cohesive, mixing the European screamo sound with the Japanese aesthetic. Asthenia's track is solid, continuing the approach from their recent 10" release. Their sound is consistently awesome, channeling old school US and UK screamo. The two Calculator tracks are re-released from another split. They are awesome, as expected. 

Listen:

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Buy:


7. Saisa - Aftermath



Saisa continue to put out some of the best post-rock in the world. Aftermath, their 2014 EP, is only 3 tracks long, but demonstrate just how it's done to all the other wannabes. Adding some strong piano to their tracks and a touch of synth only adds to the epic, dreamy nature of each track. There are no surprises here, but that's kind of what I wanted. Great recording quality, great song-writing. After a full-length in 2013, I hope that this is just a stop-gap for an album in the works for 2015.

Listen:



Buy:


MeatCubeLabel (USA)

8. Zenands Gots - 暗夜に蠢く



Zenands Gots was mostly a mystery to me before this album. I'd seen their name on flyers of Stubborn Father concerts, but couldn't find anything online. When I got my hands on this album, I knew the wait was worth it. Zenands Gots is a two-piece experimental grind band from Tokyo. Their music is fascinating and brutal, the recording belies the band's few members. The drums especially stand out with complex rhythms that are constantly interesting and changing. The only downside to this album is how short the 14 minutes (7 songs) feels, since it blazes by at a breakneck pace.  

Listen:

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9. Swarrrm - Flower



Swarrrm has long been one of my favorite bands. Each new album brings new experimentation in grind, they constantly keep things fresh and unexpected. 2014's Flower is no exception. The album starts out with an almost acoustic track with rumbling growled vocals over it. The second track sounds like some sort of rock ballad with the same tortured vocals. By the third track, the grind engine has started and things get expectedly grindy. Throughout, Swarrrm pushes the envelope on song structure, rhythm, melody, and instrumentation. Flower sees Swarrrm trying some new things, but they maintain their position as the kings of Japanese grind.

Listen:



Buy:


HandShake Inc. Releasing on Vinyl Soon! (USA)
Amazon (Japan)

10. Stereo Type - Anthology



Stereo Type, a long-running post-rock band from Tokyo, announced their disbanding earlier this year. As one final hurrah, they released a best of album, Anthology, to prove to everyone that they were one of the best post-rock bands ever. I've followed them for awhile, but really started to take notice with their Out of Sight, Out of Mind EP from last year. This final album collects songs from all over their history and gives the listener a wide range of styles to illustrate Stereo Type's mastery of them all. Post-rock is not my favorite genre, but strong songs that have a defined sense of mood to them definitely appeal to me. That's what I get out of this album, very focused songs with expert instrumentation. Definitely one of the best instrumental rock releases of the year.

Listen:



Buy:


Strange Tales Records (USA)
Further Platonix Records (Japan)

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Best Albums of 2012

Yes, I know 2013 is almost halfway through. I also know I haven't touched this blog in a long time. Whatever. I'm a walking contradiction! Anyways, I recorded this best of 2012 podcast awhile ago and thought I'd post it with my write-up as well. Enjoy!

sora - echo
mother - 1990
tetola93 - 腐敗の一死報国
saisa - Faith In Ordinary
birth - 音楽は変わった

My Top 5 Releases of 2012:


Sora - 灯台の上で待つ
     - I feel almost a responsibility to put this first. Sora split up in December, playing their final show after almost 10 years (I saw one of their first shows in 2003). Before they left us, they recorded a proper album which is the true summit of their monumental climb to perfect their sound. From their beginnings as crucial Japanese screamo, through their delvings into post-screamoish rock, they finally hit at this ultimate sound. Japanese style indie rock, but intense in a way that only epic screamo bands can be. Vocals which are passionate and emotional, but smooth and nice on the ears. I loved this hard when it came out, and on 12/31/12 with no close contenders, I have to call it my Best Album of 2012.


Mother - the Living Dead
     - After a demo in late 2011, Kyoto's Mother release their debut album through Impulse Records and ruin everyone else's hopes of making better music. The vanguard of a newly coagulating Japanese sound, Mother builds on the shoulders of predecessors like Turbostaat and 1000 Travels of Jawaharlal. They dabble in the same genre as Infro and Eye, but this debut album really cements exactly what they are about and where they're going. Fantastic album.


Tetola93/Visyaaa split
     - My first listen of Tetola93 left me in total confusion. Emo-violence? Singing? Thrash? I couldn't wrap my head around this mass of chaos, emotion, and melody that was blaring through my headphones. But it was addictive, like crack. Each song was only the good parts. No lukewarm bridges or lousy verses. Short, sweet, and perfect, I had to re-listen to each song over and over and over. This split in particular is their newest and greatest. Tetola93 is essential; they are the shape of Japanese screamo to come. Visyaaa is good too, but unlucky being paired with another band that overshadows them so much. Tetola93 played their last show in 2012, but our in the process of recording an LP to be released by MeatCubeLabel in 2013.


Saisa - This Empty Space Returns Your Solitude
     - Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and I don't mind listening to really good "imitations." So, to get it out of the way, Saisa sounds a lot like Sigur Ros. This is not a bad thing. From there, Saisa develop their own sound from the Sigur Ros-ian mold to deliver some of the most soothing, soaring, peaceful, passionate, heavenly, earthly sounds this side of Tokyo. And they do it all with three people. Keep It Together Records released this, their debut EP, on cassette last year. It's one of those incomprehensible moments where a band that should be playing stadiums is actually completely unheard of. Anyways, this is worth it and was really one of the best things out last year.


PS Burn This Letter - Written There For All
     - Something like 3-5 years in the making (the songs were recorded in 2009 I think), P.S. Burn This Letter's first, final, and only release finally makes it out on 7" & CD-R. This band seemed to be custom made for me. Members of Gauge Means Nothing, Tiala, and Box the Compass. This EP (Single?) sounds exactly like you would expect. Carefully crafted emotional hardcore reminiscent of late-90's, early 2000's Ebullition and Japanese screamo acts. In many ways I've moved on to shorter, faster fare, but these songs take me back and do it so good.

Short List (Good albums worth your time & hard-earned money):
Alt Of The Society - Yobikakerukoegakieteiku
     - Debut EP of this Tokyo act, mixing Envy/Heaven in Her Arms style post-rock screamo with Sora-like, intense singing. Pretty blown away by this and the band keeps getting better in their recently release split with Nonrem. I listened hard.

Birth - Ishiyo
     - Finally, a proper full length from these guys. The heavy grooves really surprised me, adding a new dimension to their 3cm tour influenced sound, and making their songs surprisingly danceable. You know you wnat this.

Stubborn Father x R3-N7
     - A complete surprise for me. I'd only heard one song from Stubborn Father before, so this split was so good to hear. Complex and cerebral grindy, thrashy hardcore. Stubborn Father is a visionary band. On the other side is R3N7's most recent crusty demolition trip. The songs are good, but can get monotonous. Odd to see a band go from screamo to synth-spazz-whatever to crust.

Low-Pass - Trimurti
     - Release on cassette through Keep It Together Records this year, Low-Pass's most recent album is finally accessible to the world. Some of the smartest and smoothest instrumental rock heard in many, many years.

Atata - Tatat
     - I was over the moon when I first listened to this, and it's still an amazing album. The intensity can be exhausting once you've listened to the album for awhile. Still, if you haven't picked this up, you're doing yourself a disservice.

To Overflow Evidence - また空をみるために白紙に描く日々の事
     - The 2011 Japan tsunami hit on the same day these guys were doing some final tracking for this album. While it might not technically be reflected in the recording, there is definitely a strong melancholic optimism shining through this album. A full 11 songs of pure Japanese screamo melodies with mid-tempo drums and some surprises. This was a solid album.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

New Stuff in the Distro!


I don't mention my distro as much as I think maybe I should, but this past week or so has been really good with new stuff and I thought it would be cool to bring up some of the new releases in there that you can get your hands on RIGHT NOW. So without further ado, here are some of the highlights of the new Japanese stuff I've got:
Two of the best epic screamo bands in Japan today. Madpress has a very strong Forget me not vibe, but are a little more aggressive with it. In the Unknown plays similar, but have a different feel to their melodies. Overall, this has really been one of my favorite releases of 2012 (even though it came out in 2011). When I was able to get this in the distro, I literally girl-screamed with joy. Do yourself a huge favor and get this now.
You may remember Midnight Parade from when I wrote about them a few weeks ago. This is their newest release and offers up two more of their post-rock influenced emo songs. Kitten shares members with Document Not Found and Stereo Type, and play some very angular and frenetic screamo. This CD just comes together so well with both bands contributing stellar songs and blowing away my expectations.
I don't think I hide my love of Tetola93, but if I didn't mention it yet today: I love Tetola93. They're just so extreme, playing with so much passion and originality, it's everything that is right about music. This is their newest output and arguably their best songs to date. I usually call them a mashup of Killie and Louise Cyphre, but I feel like there's more to it (there is). Regardless, if you like loudish music, Tetola93 could be your next favorite band. They split the disc with Visyaaa, who play some wild thrash done really well.
5 amazing bands playing in 5 distinct styles. This disc is great not only because of the quality of each band, but because it totally mixes it up. Sort of like a compilation, but more tracks from each band so they really sink in. FLEX play have a sort of DC-style emotional hardcore, but updated to 2011 (when this was release). Nothing, nothing, nothing have former members of Next Style & Dignity For All and play a more Ebullition influenced late-90's emotional hardcore style. Blue Ray Dance play that San Diego wild screamo sound, ala Swing Kids. TG.Atlas play angular post-hardcore, influenced by The Jesus Lizard. And finally, Threadyarn remind me of that Sapporo screamo sound, ala The Carnival of Dark-Split. Overall, really good stuff here for everybody.
And that's not all the new stuff, I just didn't want to make this post too long. Here are some more things I've stocked recently:




Friday, April 27, 2012

[Bandcamp] Tetola93 - split with Visyaaa [2012]


Whew... what a week. I do get a little tired trying to write about bands everyday. I wasn't a journalism or writing major, so I usually have a limited vocabulary to write about music. I guess I've improved, but it's still tough. So, usually I schedule things on Friday that I'm really into. This ends the week on a good point for me and gives me some motivation to keep going through the week. At first I didn't do it on purpose, but now I try to bookend the week with two releases that are easier for me to write about (because I love them). This also lets me exercise some flexibility during the week and post stuff that I might not know that much about. I listen to a lot of different kind of stuff (right now I'm listening to the Persona 3 OST), and not all of it would fit on this site, but I try to cover almost everything in the Japanese underground (except maybe the noise/experimental scene. That's suicide trying to go after all that stuff). But, today is not that day. Today is about distilled Japanese screamo and Tetola93.

TO THE MUSIC!


Sometimes I dive directly into a band, sometimes I dip my toe in and slow go deeper. I first heard Tetola93 on the Phone/Tetola93/AO split. It was streaming on spotify, and I heard about it through phone (maybe I was looking at their myspace?). It was pretty immediate, they were amazing. But their myspace had very little information. I listened the the split songs several times, and then it slipped out of my memory.

Later, I was sharing some music with a friend, and they shared Tetola93's 3rd demo and an EP. That was when the love affair started, but still slowly. I listened to the songs and liked them, but they hadn't sunk in yet. I would listen through both releases together, the epic emo-violence washing over me, and it would be over before I knew it.

But then, they put up their bandcamp site. Have I mentioned how much I love bandcamp? Yeah, probably. I had watched a trailer of their upcoming split with Visyaa, and drooled a bit. So when I saw it on their bandcamp, I listened and listened and listened. I might've listened to those 5 tracks 10 times in the first day. It was wonderful, they were perfect. It reminded me of how I used to listen to Love Like... Electrocution's full-length. There would be these small parts in each one of the songs that would only last maybe 10 seconds, but they were perfect, so I would listen to some songs on repeat, just over and over. With Tetola93, it was the same thing. Each song had so many different feelings, emotions, and sounds that I would listen and re-listen. And I didn't get sick of the songs, I just kept finding new things in them.

You might listen and think Killie or Louise Cyphre. Maybe a mashup of the two. And I'd agree to a point, because there is definitely a similar song structure and dynamic range between all three bands. But where those bands stay pretty focused on a very narrow sound, Tetola93 opens it up just a bit and lets in some light. One of the most obvious expansions is the sung vocals that overlay a lot of the screaming. I admit, at first I didn't get it; I thought it sounded a little weird. But now I get it, and see how perfect it is and how much it changes the sound. Agh, just listen to OVID on the 3rd Demo at 0:20 and you'll see exactly what I mean. It's singing, but not how other bands do it. It's like this intense, desperate, begging singing, asking the screamo gods for mercy. It just adds so much to the music, and its something that if it was not in the music, it would sound completely different and not as perfect.

I don't know much about the band, so there's not much else to say. I really got chills when I watched the video I posted up above. Just the intensity in that video and how perfectly it matched to the music is pretty rare. I think there's something really special about this band.

On a good note, I'll be getting copies of this split and the Phone/Tetola93/AO split in my distro soon. Look for it!



1. Habit Was Tampered With
2. Take Away The Life There Is No Right
3. Meritocracy
4. Dying For One's Country
5. Sinks In Marsh