Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Paga Group by request [Paga 1985, Haunted 1988, Gnosis 1993] FLACs limited time only

 






Bernard Paganotti was a bassist in Magma, in the one-off (1978 release) Weidorje, and of course created his own group thereafter called Paga Group which made two albums, though the one credited to him called Paga from 1985 is essentially the same.

The music is zeuhl with light fusion, none of the high-energy dissonance that was in Magma and Weidorje, much, much more approachable and as you'd expect, more so the further along we get in the decade of the 1980s on to 1993's Gnosis, released in the early CD era.

Zigzag, from this last album, is a composition by the keyboardist Bernard Lajudie:


Monday, 9 March 2026

Akihisa Tsuboy with Korekyojinn in Doldrums, 2010

 



This is the violinist from KBB, whose own personal page is here.  I put up all the KBB stuff back here and here, it's a lot of music to slog through with the occasional delight, in my opinion.

In fact the music here is from the latter artist, a band called Korekyojinn, and not that similar to KBB.  The sound is quite dissonant-- almost atonal / free jazz, way beyond what the great Fripp would have been comfortable with.  As an example, the title track:




Saturday, 7 March 2026

Tatsu Akiba in his ST from 2026, limited time only

 


Information on this one here.  The style is similar to the previous post but amazingly, the music is even better in my opinion.  A track called Sign 2 Turn 4 Another 1 sounds eerily like Richard Sinclair's singing on Hatfield, and that of course is a wonderful thing, something to be prized:



Amazingly at times he pulls out the classic Soft Machine sound of fuzzy bass plus wah-wah hammond organ.  Amazing!  Boy do I miss that sound.

The missing 2023 album was requested: Cities in People, does anyone have it, by chance, to share with us?

Thursday, 5 March 2026

Tatsu Akiba in Swans Dance, Roses Bloom like Mad 2021, Limited Time Only! [Canterbury sound]

 




Information to be found here
"Japanese multi-instrumentalist, composer and progressive rock musician."

Definitely this is a case of understating the situation, it turns out it's brilliantly played, brilliantly composed classic prog of the kind we adore here, leaning towards the old Canterbury classics especially Hatfield. On this blog, the old Stubbs (Kojiro Yamashita) from more than a decade ago is very similar.

There are 3 albums in total so far from Akiba this being the first one from 2021.  I am not sure about the 'unreleased tracks' listed below on the discogs page.

A Host of Heroes etc. sounds very classic in the prog style, similar perhaps to Germans Epidermis, with the vocals sung on top of a dissonant and irregular-rhythm riff:


On the other hand a track called Brigid's Hut sounds like he listened very closely to beloved classic prog band Yezda Urfa of Boris fame, and learned how to play its own unique brand of insanity:


Pretty remarkable, right?

Note also the use of mellotron here and there.

Altogether, a very enjoyable album.

I'll be back with one more from him shortly.

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Didier Malherbe in 1990's Fetish CD [plus 1979 Bloom, 1981 Melodic Destiny, 1986 Faton Bloom, 1989 Saxo Folies]

 









I thought for sure I posted him before, but only in connection with Faton Cahen, here, and Patrice Meyer. Of course he's most known for the work he did with Gong.

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.