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VA - Even A Tree Can Shed Tears: Japanese Folk & Rock 1969-1973 (2017)

Posted By: delpotro
VA - Even A Tree Can Shed Tears: Japanese Folk & Rock 1969-1973 (2017)

VA - Even A Tree Can Shed Tears: Japanese Folk & Rock 1969-1973 (2017)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) | 01:16:51 | 451 Mb
Folk Rock | Label: Light in the Attic Records

There was something in the air in the urban corners of late ‘60s Japan. Student protests and a rising youth culture gave way to the angura (short for “underground) movement that thrived on subverting traditions of the post-war years. Rejection of the Beatlemania-inspired Group Sounds and the squeaky clean College Folk movements led the rise of what came to be known in Japan as “New Music,” where authenticity mattered more than replicating the sounds of their idols.

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.

Nearly 50 years on, this “New Music” is born anew.
Tracklist:
1. Kenji Endo - Curry Rice
2. Kazuhiko Yamahira & The Sherman - Sotto Futari De
3. Sachiko Kanenobu - Anata Kara Toku E
4. Fluid - Rokudenashi
5. Kazuhiko Kato - Arthur Hakase No Jinriki Hikouki
6. Happy End - Natsu Nandesu
7. Takashi Nishioka - Man-in No Ki
8. Masato Minami - Yoru Wo Kugurinukeru Made
9. Maki Asakawa - Konna Fu Ni Sugite Iku No Nara
10. Fumio Nunoya - Mizu Tamari
11. Haruomi Hosono - Boku Wa Chotto
12. Takuro Yoshida - Aoi Natsu
13. Akai Tori - Takeda No Komori Uta
14. Gu - Marianne
15. Tetsuo Saito - Ware Ware Wa
16. Gypsy Blood - Sugishi Hi Wo Mitsumete
17. Hachimitsu Pie - Hei No Ue De
18. Ryo Kagawa - Zeni No Kouryouryoku Ni Tsuite
19. The Dylan II - Otokorashiitte Wakaru Kai