Volcanic Tongue Catalogue

Kaoru Abe
Mokuyobi No Yoru Solo 1972/7/13

PSF PSFD-66

CD
£14.99


This is another beautiful live document from the late starcrossed free saxophonist Kaoru Abe's peak period, three solo alto improvisations from '72 that work echoes of weird popular song and folk ghosts into some torrential throat action. Abe was always at his most exploratory when he was all alone in space and this is a thrilling document of a man liberated from any interactive concerns and free to follow the gush of his own muse. Highly recommended.

Kaoru Abe
Winter 1972

PSF PSFD-158

CD
£14.99


Alongside noise guitarist Masayuki Takayanagi, the late saxophonist Kaoru Abe was in the vanguard of Japan's new music, articulating an approach to the saxophone that matched extreme velocity with an elastic facility with the instrument's most phantom registers and a sculptural approach to instant composition that saw him carve poignant shapes from massive blocks of silence. Abe died of a heroin overdose on September 9th, 1978 at the age of 29, making 2004 the 27th anniversary of his passing, one that was marked by special rites in Japan. As a memorial to this great sound-thinker PSF put together a special package, an official release of the rarest of Abe's recorded works, originally released as a bootleg in a plain white sleeve on the Osaka Soundworks label in 73/74. The early-70s were Abe's most prolific and inspired years and this live set from 1972 is a stone classic, a powerfully focussed set of solo saxophone that works the molten flow of his brain and fingers into lines of dense, ferocious beauty, from drooling, all-out blurt to exactingly articulated ice-cold blues. Mesmerising. Includes Japanese/English liners by PSF owner Hideo Ikeezumi.

Kaoru Abe-Hiroshi Yamazaki Duo
Jazz Bed 1971.1.24

PSF PSFD-67

CD
£14.99


For any Abe neophytes this is the one to start with; a high-wire duo set that sees Abe's breath conceptions shredded by Yamazaki's ferocious percussive assault. Yamazaki is best known for association with free-noise guitarist Masayuki Takayanagi as part of the guitarist's New Directions ensemble and this is a wild disc, with two long tracks recorded 24/1/1972 that pack as much blood and fire as already-canonical blow-outs like Adieu Little Man, Duo Exchange and Interstellar Space.