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EVEN A TREE CAN SHED TEARS: JAPANESE FOL - VINYL EVEN A TREE CAN SHED TEARS: JAPANESE FOL [VINYL]

 EVEN A TREE CAN SHED TEARS: JAPANESE FOL [VINYL] - suprshop.cz
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Datum vydání: 27.10.2017
Žánr ALTERNATIVE
EAN: 0826853015615 (info)
Label: LIGHT IN THE ATTIC
Obsahuje nosičů: 1
Nosič: VINYL

Popis - EVEN A TREE CAN SHED TEARS: JAPANESE FOL [VINYL]:
'JAPANESE FOLK & ROCK 1969-1973' - Some of the most influential figures in Japanese pop music emerged from the late'60s, yet very little of their work has ever been released or heard outside of Japan, until now. This is the first-ever, fully licensed collection of essential Japanese folk and rock songs from the peak years of the angura (short for "underground") movement to reach Western audiences. In mid-to-late 1960s Tokyo, young musicians and college students were drawn to Shibuya's Dogenzaka district for the jazz and rock kissas, or cafes, that dotted its winding hilly streets. Some of these spaces doubled as performance venues, providing a stage for local regulars like Hachimitsu Pie with their The Band-like ragged Americana, Tetsuo Saito with his spacey philosophical folk, and the influential Happy End, who successfully married the unique cadences of the Japanese language to the rhythms of the American West Coast. For many years Dogenzaka remained a center of the city's "New Music" scene. Meanwhile a different kind of music subculture was beginning to emerge in the Kansai region around Osaka, Kyoto, and Kobe. Far more political than their eastern counterparts, many of the Kansai-based "underground" artists began in the realm of protest folk music. They include Takashi Nishioka and his progressive folk collective Itsutsu No Akai Fuusen, the "Japanese Joni Mitchell" Sachiko Kanenobu, and The Dylan II, whose members ran The Dylan cafe in Osaka, which became a hub for the scene. 'Even A Tree Can Shed Tears' also includes the bluesy avant-garde stylings of Maki Asakawa, future Sadistic Mika Band founder Kazuhiko Kato with his fuzzy, progressive psychedelia, the beatnik acid folk of Masato Minami, and the intimate living room folk of Kenji Endo.


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