Sunday, 7 December 2025
Griot Galaxy's Opus Krampus, by request, plus more
Friday, 5 December 2025
Inoue Takayuki Band's Sunrise from 1976
Information on Inoue Takayuki:
Japanese rock guitarist, composer and arranger. Born in Kobe 15-Mar-1941, died 02-May-2018.
He was a member of The Spiders (3), Pyg (2), the Takayuki Inoue Band, and worked for a long period as a member of Kenji Sawada's backing band.
His band is hidden (in Japanese characters) on this page:
Inoue Takayuki Band. Japanese rock group, formed in 1971 by members of The Spiders (3) and Pyg (2). The band was led by Takayuki Inoue.
Both his output on his own and the band's output are rather prolific. There are occasionally several LPs released in a given year of the seventies!
I will have to try to get a grip on some of it to get an idea if it's all as good as this instrumental, fusionary library-like work from 1976 called Sunrise. In fact it sounds almost like a library record, but has an enormous amount of variety in terms of composition with light sounds, breezy stuff, then more progressive fusion material. Maybe someone can provide some insight on whether this is a worthwhile endeavour.
The first side long track is very interesting in the way it progresses through so much musical history, the last part even uses the Moonlight Sonata's famous minor-key three-note piano arpeggio in C sharp minor, but I think a half tone lower (C minor). I detect a little bit of Pink Floyd influence [Wish you were here] in some places with the sustained keyboard chords and the dramatic buildup, though that's what you'd expect from a musical depiction of Sunrise. I recommend you listen to it with big headphones, the biggest you've got, with noise cancellation preferably, to neutralize the external sounds of your family begging you to turn the music off and help with the household chores or children screaming in the background...
First track of the second side with its interesting organ tritonal chords, colored by surrounding synth sounds:
Track 6 or B5 if you're following on the database, highlights the kind of soundtrack (horror movie in this instance?) composition that this versatile musician was capable of:
Wednesday, 3 December 2025
Back to Bible Black with II - Message From Moonbase [FLAC limited time only]
Information on this release here. Earlier I posted the first album and the 1984 cassette from their guitarist, called Rose, back here, long ago. So last year, 40 years after that first cassette, 12 years after the first CD, they posted a second album with the above title, approximately in a similar style to the first Bible Black, so a very enjoyable King Crimson-like mix of symphonic and typical hard guitar prog sounds, perhaps like their compatriots Social Tension posted here.
The Opening or Intro makes it clear exactly what we're dealing with here, taking us right back to the great classics of the late 1970s in synthesizer prog:
It's followed by Subway:
And the remainder of the composition just follows in the same vein, without any let up. Really good, classic prog. Obviously, the guitarwork by Rose is just stunning, but the synth player, who is this guy, equally magnificent.
A track called Poison brings back the great Frippian dissonant riffs:
Monday, 1 December 2025
Japanese Anzen Band, Album A, 1975 [nonFLAC] and 1976 [FLAC]
Brilliant cover art in both instances, I think we can agree.
Information on the band here. Unfortunately, only 2 albums from the mid 1970s.
Track 4 from the first album gives you an idea of the delightful mix of sax plus rock this band is capable of:
Saturday, 29 November 2025
Mezzoforte from Iceland (1979 ST and 1980 Octopus aka I Hakanum)

















