This appropriately Japanese Samurai is not to be confused with the much more famous British band of course, that one too with an unforgettably beautiful cover painting, and that one too released in the same year of 1971.
The discogs description this time oddly enough is both useful and accurate:
Samurai was a prog/hard rock band active in the late 60s/early 70s. Not to be confused with the british band Samurai (6) renamed from The Web , this group was started by rockabilly singer/actor Miki Curtis along with fellow Japanese and European musicians, creating a mix of hard rock, psych, prog and Japanese folk. In their time of activity they made two albums...
They went to Europe in late 1967, picking up some European members and thus becoming half-Japanese. In London they recorded in 1970 a single and their debut album, the double-LP Samurai aka Miki Curtis & Samurai, as well as a single only released in Italy (1969). Their 2nd album "Green Tea" (1971) was simply a single-LP repackaging of the debut only released in Japan, to where the band had returned. In 1971, the band released "Kappa". The band played a varied kind of psychedelic progressive rock, occasionally a bit hard-rocking, with jazzy and exotic Asian touches and a 22-minute closing jam. They've been compared by Vernon Joyson to Andwella's Dream and early Traffic. The bassist, Tetsu Yamauchi, later played in Kossoff, Kirke, Tetsu & Rabbit , Free and The Faces, as well as pursuing a brief solo career. Drummer Yujin Harada later played in the last incarnation of Far East Family Band.
And I guess Far East FB is quite similar musically. The first album from 1970 with the Kabuki maekup cover is straight simple blues rock sung in English, of course. Green Tea:
From the second album which is slightly more progressive but minimally so-- more psych jammy to my ears, Trauma:







ReplyDeleteboth albums
https://krakenfiles.com/view/sz2co9h9EA/file.html
no more sendspace
let's try turbobit, let's see how it goes, let me know
https://trbt.cc/wvxbz5mjkid3.html
Thanks for these two gems of Japanese progressive heavy metal. Downloaded successfully via Turbobit.
ReplyDeleteGood sir, thanks so much for these titles!
ReplyDeleteVery grateful.
I wished to chime in on my experience with downloading. To this day, kraken remains an easier and quicker process for me. Some browsers began having trouble with it though, but not chrome, for one. Turbo and others like, present hoops and delays, which can be a drag to work with. Mediafire was always a charm, but you know how it turned out eventually, with various title interference, but not all. None was smoother than MF (when not expired). The pixen dl is a friendly process, though they tend to cap volume per day. Still worth it, with a restart-refresh, and storage unlimited, it has appeared to me. It is quite commonly used now.
I know blog places where the old google dl for files remains... easy and accessible for years beyond a decade. Seems there is no time limit to store items, and beginning dl is instant and most rapid, zero ads or noise, just dl to press, none easier or faster, seemingly, a rock (... your body of work deserves).
I like the sendspace you've used exclusively (as a backup) because it has been a reliable, near permanent dl storage for your archive. Despite how very slow it can be, little to no steps to begin dl, and seemingly easy for you to restore. I hope your vast archive is safe.
Mega works, but it starts slow and requires signup, I believe. Not a fav, personally.
I also have found the newer wudo (its called?) ru dl to be easy enough and reliable. As well, yandex to be simple, quick and easy (not so commonly seen anymore, it seems).
wow very exhaustive and thanks for this
DeleteI do hope the old sendspace links will still work though I have a feeling it's just a matter of time before they break down