Thursday, 5 March 2026
Tatsu Akiba in Swans Dance, Roses Bloom like Mad 2021, Limited Time Only! [Canterbury sound]
Tuesday, 3 March 2026
Didier Malherbe in 1990's Fetish CD [plus 1979 Bloom, 1981 Melodic Destiny, 1986 Faton Bloom, 1989 Saxo Folies]
From the requested album Fetish, released 1990, the last 2 songs feature synth player Rykiel, discogged here. These are really lovely, consider Hors D'oeuvres:
I'm assuming everyone is already familiar with the great Bloom album and Faton Bloom, which is a kind of follow up from 1986 with Cahen. From that one, the lovely but oddly named Vulvox:
From the cassette only release with guitarist Yan Emeric, A Breughel really blew me away in its compositional glory, I am not sure which of his paintings the progressive complexity could be alluding to:
Otherwise this release is a bit of mixed bag.
Back to the Japanese stuff straightaway after.
Sunday, 1 March 2026
KBB, Part 2: Four Corner's Sky (2003), Live 2004, Proof of Concept (2007), Live Bootleg 2008
Here are the other albums from this great prog-fusion band.
Discography here.
Horobi no kawa from Live 2004 sounds very much like old, classic Kenso:
Lagoon Nebula, from Proof of Concept, 2007:
Intermezzo, from the 2008 Live Bootleg:
Setting aside the live albums, which perform tracks mostly from the albums, I do believe the first one was their best but that's open to disagreement.
Friday, 27 February 2026
KBB, Part 1: Lost and Found (2000), Age of Pain (2013)
Japanese jazz rock fusion / progressive rock band led by violinist Akihisa Tsuboy since 1992.
So with the violin front and center, you can expect a kind of fusion similar to the TEE posted earlier here, not as much variety as the classic french ones (eg Didier Lockwood) unfortunately. There's a lot of hammond and electric guitar, none of the more delicate chamber music type stuff, making it occasionally seem monochromatic.
Their first album is from 2000, more than 25 years ago now, and it's called Lost and Found. A track called Divine Design reminds me a lot of classic Kenso, and that's a wonderful thing of course:
From the final one, coming out in 2013, called Age of Pain, the great emotional resonance of Lythrum:















