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Jutok Kaneko/Takahisa Kikukawa
Wedged Night
SIWA
LP
£19.99
Beautifully ragged set of death-blues and downer ballads from vocalist/guitar monster Jutok Kaneko, formerly of Tokyo underground legends/PSF recordings artists Kousokuya, and drummer/vocalist Takahisa Kikukawa. This is the kind of parched desert metal first posited by Neil Young sides like Zuma, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere and Arc/Weld taken to whole new levels of gravity-defying psychedelic doom. Comes in a striking black-on-black silk-screened sleeve by Alan Sherry. Long out of print. Highly recommended for fans of stylised personal crunch; you know that means you.
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Kousokuya
1st
PSF PSFD-132
CD
£14.99
Alongside Keiji Haino’s Fushitsusha, Jutok Kaneko’s death-decadent Kousokuya ruled the Tokyo underground of the 80s and 90s with a lead fist. Kaneko can mangle six strings better than anyone this side of Neil Young and Tony Iommi. 1st is a long-overdue reissue of Kousokuya’s ultra-rare debut LP, originally self-released in 1991 in an edition of only 200 copies. It features the classic original line-up of guitarist Kaneko, female bassist/vocalist ‘Mick’ and drummer Ikuro Takahashi (of Fushitsusha et al). Hands down one of the most formally flattening records to come out of whole Japanese scene. Highest recommendation.
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Kousokuya
Live Gyakuryu Kokuu
PSF PSFD-152
CD
£14.99
Kousokuya, led by renowned guitar monster Jutok Kaneko, were a massive presence on the Tokyo underground throughout the 80s and 90s. Their debut LP, originally self-released in a tiny run in 1991and since reissued on CD by PSF, plotted galaxies of heavy gravity like nothing this side of Neil Young’s Weld and Black Sabbath’s Masters Of Reality. Kaneko’s guitar playing is brutally blunt, working staggered rhythms into huge, tottering constructions that crash to earth with all the ferocious inevitability of dead stars. Vocalist Mick’s high despairing vocals and ten-nods-behind-the-beat bass style reinforce the profoundly desperate, nihilistic air while drummer Ikuro Takahashi (Fushitsusha et al) sets single megaton blasts in the background. Live Gyakuryu Kokuu is a killer retrospective of this mammoth outfit, two long tracks recorded the same year as their debut album that work forms from ominous black gulfs like nothing else this side of Fushitsusha. Highest recommendation.
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