«Relator»
Liner Notes to a solo CD from Tetuzi Akiyama
2001
Slub Music 06
printable version // 40 kb PDF
My first impression on hearing Captain, Tetuzi Akiyamas
first solo release, was a constant lingering of the blues, the deep Setagaya
blues. Music often conjures forth physical recollections for me: light,
smell, an atmoshpere undefinable yet tangible, transporting me to another
time and place and leaving me there for the length of the recording. In
Akiyamas case, this atmosphere lingered on long after captains
last track had ended: I found myself at night in one of the outlying corners
of Setagaya-ku, the light source Tokyo a faint glow reflecting off the grey
night sky. In Setagaya the stars shine at night and a fresh wind blows through
the many trees and empty fields. There is a certain easiness about setagaya
which I havent experienced in other parts of Tokyo. LIke the languid
koi in the muddy canals running through Setagaya, time there flows of its
own accordopposite to the Tokyo core, where the daily time-space continuum
pushes with the infinite relay of an 0-1-0-1-0-1-0-1 infterface approaching
a long-awaited meltdown.
Akiyamas music unfolds with the easy pace of the Setagaya countryside.
He doesnt push sound around and is patient enough to wait until the
next note appears. When enough notes have been played, the piece is over.
His music seems as simple as that to me, which is not to say that his music
is simple--it is complex in both the feelings and images it evokes and in
the dynmaic range it covers: from the sharp attack of an unmistakeable affinity
with country blues to, on tracks five and six, an excursion into primordial
sound: scraping, knocking, scratching, silence. These tracks seemed on the
verge of disappearing as they mingled with the sounds outside my window.
Akiyamas music is big enough to make room for any sound which happens
to be occurring at the time one is listening. It is truly open-source music
and reveals how important the research into sound as a physical entity is
for Akiyama.
all of which to say is: this cd rocks. and flows. And leaves one with a
good feeling in the stomach afterwards. The greatest challenge facing any
musician is to find ones voice, to express oneself unfettered by cliché or preconceived notion--the instrument becomes transparent, secondary. The
listener senses only the pure emotional expression of the person behind
the instrument. and this Akiyama has done remarkably well. For me, he is
truly one of the most original voices to emerge from the current scene of
Tokyo musicians thinking beyond the mere conventions of music and coming
to terms with sound. I think anyone hearing this cd will surely agree with
me. |