11.6.13

Tetuzi Akiyama - Relator (2001)



One more while I'm at it, and before I go dormant again for God knows how long. Not Taku Sugimoto this time, but not straying too far either, here's another sought-after classic from a Japanese pioneer: Tetuzi Akiyama (秋山徹次; Tetuzi is his idiosyncratic way of spelling Tetsuji, as I may have mentioned before). This is his solo guitar album 'Relator', released in 2001 on Sugimoto's Slubmusic label.



I'm going to make it easy on myself and just quote the ever-reliable Brian Olewnick on this one:
"Akiyama, a guitarist, electronicist, and sometime violist, is most closely associated with the Japanese free improvisation scene centered around Taku Sugimoto. On Relator, a series of improvisations on acoustic guitar, he nestles into a space midway between Sugimoto's ultra-quiet serenity and the more agitated state of players like Derek Bailey. The pieces tend to be sparse and, in a sense, simple with highly abstracted blues motifs recurring irregularly. The guitar often sounds as though strung with extreme looseness, ensuring that a rattling sound will rough things up if they threaten to get too pristine. Akiyama's volume level ranges from nonexistent up to about medium range, never getting very loud. Some of the tracks (such as "Preparation") have a lovely, almost bucolic mood while others fall into random scrape 'n' clunk forays. At his best, he shows a keen sense of aural space and a very calm and relaxed approach to playing, though the listener may have to decide where to draw the line between relaxedness and lassitude. Generally, Relator will appeal to fans of quiet improv and post-Bailey guitar playing. Newcomers to this genre may prefer to begin with the more accessible Sugimoto." (All Music Guide)
Get it now at a fingerlicking 320kbps.
Here.

7 comments:

  1. Thanks for the recent posts...Any chance that you could re-up Joe Colley's Disasters of Self? I would really like to hear that album.

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  2. Lo, it is done! http://schwebeablaut.blogspot.be/2011/01/joe-colley-disasters-of-self-2010.html

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  3. In the period I first heard the two, I thought Akiyama was "more accessible" than Sugimoto. A big part of Akiyama is the blues - I had no frame work when I was introduced to Sugimoto.

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  4. Have been looking for this forever. Thank you so much, you're doing God's work.

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  5. Sometimes I feel like you're able to see my itunes list and know which obscure record from this era I need next.

    Thanks a bunch, can't wait to hear this one.


    Also, you wouldn't happen to have Tori by Sugimoto would you?

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  6. No worries, thanks again for this one.

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