Showing posts with label Fujiya & Miyagi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fujiya & Miyagi. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 June 2019

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Flashback (2019)

Style: Synth-pop
Format: CD, Vinyl, FLAC
Label: Impossible Objects of Desire

Tracklist:
1.   Flashback
2.   Personal Space
3.   For Promotional Use Only
4.   Fear Of Missing Out
5.   Subliminal
6.   Dying Swan Act
7.   Gammon




Origins is a recurring new music feature which challenges artists to dig into the influences behind their newest track. 
Throughout the course of their 20-year career, Fujiya & Miyagi have never once forgotten their beginnings. From 2011’s Ventriloquizzing and 2014’s Artificial Sweeteners to their EP trilogy released throughout 2016 and 2017, the Brighton natives have always found a way to fold in their love of electronic music and all its sub-genres, be it electropop, disco, or even the Geramyn’s ’70s-era krautrock. 
For their forthcoming new album, Fujiya & Miyagi dig deeper into their roots perhaps more than ever. Aptly titled Flashback and due May 29th via Red Eye, it sees the outfit specifically engaging again with the music of their youth. 
The songs we loved during our adolescent years often stay with us for decades, or even our entire lives, almost like beautiful scars. (Please ask me about the five years I spent religiously worshipping at the Church of Pop Punk; I guarantee you I still remember every Drive-Thru Records song, word for word like a hymn.) Fujiya & Miyagi capture this almost spell-like experience on the new album’s lead single, also dubbed “Flashback”. 
“Flashback rattling round my eardrum/ It’s a psychological phenomenon/ Flashback coming from the right side of my brain/ I close my eyes and I’m transported once again,” sing Fujiya & Miyagi, “I’m in a trance, I’m in a trance, you got me caught up in a trance.” They clearly sound consumed, but they also perform a little bit of magic on their own listeners — the track’s hushed tone reveals itself to be of the hypnotic variety. 
In a statement to Consequence of Sound, Fujiya & Miyagi describe the new song as “a postcard sent to our younger selves.” They add, “It joins our first discoveries of different music and different cultures with every new discovery we’ve found since then and bounces back to the beginning again.”
For a closer look at the making of “Flashback”, the electronic outfit has elaborated on the song’s other various influences, such as breakdancing and back-up vocals. 
Electro music: 
This record started life as our funk record but soon migrated closer to electro in feel. I suppose electro is funk constructed by machines. “Flashback” is like a postcard sent to our younger selves, it joins our first discoveries of different music and different cultures with every new discovery we’ve found since then and bounces back to the beginning again. I don’t think that taste gets better as you get older, and i don’t see it as a linear thing either. Every record I’ve ever loved is equally as important as the next. 
The art of breakdancing: 
Both myself & Steve grew up in satellite towns orbiting London. I think when you grow up in the suburbs you often feel outside of where the exciting things are happening, especially as a kid. Breakdancing & electro provided the background to those early teenage years. I really wanted Nike windcheaters and Adidas Shell toes. i remember other kids having those clothes and feeling jealous. It was a bit ridiculous as Hertfordshire and Essex are a long way from Queens or the Bronx. Growing up, there were a lot of poorly executed swan dives. Flashback is a snapshot of those times. 
The power of memories: 
I’m fascinated as to why some memories stick in our minds and some memories pass us by. It’s often the awkward or unhappy situations you find yourself coming back too. Flashbacks are often used in novels or films and, generally, are a slightly lazy or clumsy way to fill in a narrative or a back story. There are a few exceptions though. The flashback scenes in Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now appear as brief, occasionally jolting, glimpses, recalling the way memories often flash before us with no invitation. I like this non linear approach and try to do similar things within our songs. 
The complementary nature of backing vocals:

I’ve always loved call & response style backing vocals, whose origins, i suppose, started with early rhythm & blues records from the 50s. You hear it through ’60s soul and ’70s funk, and it’s particularly noticeable in Velvet Underground songs, especially the VU collection that was released long after the group had split. “Flashback” backing vocals were inspired, in part, by White Light/White Heat. I like the process of taking ideas from the past and putting it into the present. Via new technologies and with a different environment, it becomes something else.
Lake Schatz / CoS

Fujiya • Miyagi ‎– Transparent Things / Different Blades From The Same Pair Of Scissors (2017)

Style: Indie Rock, Prog Rock, Krautrock, Disco, Post Rock
Format: CD
Label: Impossible Objects Of Desire

Tracklist:
01.   Ankle Injuries
02.   Collarbone
03.   Photocopier
04.   Conductor 71
05.   Transparent Things
06.   Sucker Punch
07.   In One Ear & Out The Other
08.   Cassettesingle
09.   Cylinders
        US Bonus Track
10. Reeboks in Heaven
        Different Blades From The Same Pair Of Scissors
11.   In
12.   Chichikov
13.   Paper Airplanes
14.   Sick & Tired
15.   Tic Tac Toe
16.   Out

Credits:
Mastered By – Eric James
Mixed By – Alan Boorman
Producer, Written-By – Fujiya & Miyagi
Recorded By – Julian Tardo

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Fujiya & Miyagi (2017)

Style: Krautrock, Indie Rock, Synth-pop
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Impossible Objects of Desire

Tracklist:
01.   Magnesium Flares
02.   Serotonin Rushes
03.   Solitaire
04.   To The Last Beat of My Heart
05.   Extended Dance Mix
06.   Outstripping (The Speed of Light)
07.   Swoon
08.   Freudian Slips
09.   Impossible Objects of Desire
10.   Synthetic Symphonies
11.   R.S.I.
12.   Impossible Objects Of Desire (Radio Edit)

Credits:
Engineer – Julian Tardo, Paul Pascoe
Mastered By – Eric James (5)
Mixed By – Ed Chivers
Producer – Stephen Lewis
Written-By – Fujiya & Miyagi

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Artificial Sweeteners (2014)

Style: Synth-pop, Krautrock
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Yep Roc Records

Tracklist:
1.   Flaws
2.   Acid To My Alkaline
3.   Rayleigh Scattering
4.   Artificial Sweeteners
5.   Little Stabs At Happiness
6.   Tetrahydrofolic Acid
7.   Daggers
8.   Vagaries Of Fashion
9.   A Sea Ringed With Visions

Credits:
Bass – Matthew Hainsby
Design – Charlie Rowlins
Guitar – David Best
Synthesizer – David Best, Steve Lewis
Vocals – David Best
Backing Vocals – Matthew Hainsby, Steve Lewis
Mastered By – Simon Davey
Mixed By – Alan Boorman
Producer – Stephen Lewi

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Ventriloquizzing (2011)

Style: Krautrock, Synth-pop
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Full Time Hobby, Yep Roc Records

Tracklist:
01.   Ventriloquizzing
02.   Sixteen Shades Of Black & Blue
03.   Cat Got Your Tongue
04.   Taiwanese Boots
05.   Yoyo
06.   Pills
07.   OK
08.   Minestrone
09.   Spilt Milk
10.   Tinsel & Glitter
11.   Universe

Credits:
Engineer, Mixed By – Thom Monahan
Other (Dummies) – Clare Barr
Fujiya & Miyagi Are – David Best, Lee Adams, Matt Hainsby, Stephen Lewis
Producer – Fujiya & Miyagi, Thom Monahan

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Lightbulbs (2008)

Style: Krautrock, Indie Rock, Disco
Format: CD
Label: Grönland Records, Pod, Inertia Recordings

Tracklist:
01.   Knickerbocker
02.   Uh
03.   Pickpocket
04.   Goosebumps
05.   Rook To Queen's Pawn Six
06.   Sore Thumb
07.   Dishwasher
08.   Pteradactyls
09.   Pussyfooting
10.   Lightbulbs
11.   Hundreds & Thousands

Credits:
Mastered By – Graeme Durham
Mixed By – Alan Boorman
Recorded By – Fujiya & Miyagi, Julian Tardo
Written-By, Producer – Fujiya & Miyagi

Monday, 3 June 2019

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Transparent Things (2006)

Style: Indie Rock, Prog Rock, Krautrock, Space Rock, Disco
Format: CD, Vinyl
Label: Tirk, Deaf Dumb & Blind, Impossible Objects of Desire

Tracklist:
1.   Ankle Injuries
2.   Collarbone
3.   Photocopier
4.   Conductor 71
5.   Transparent Things
6.   Sucker Punch
7.   In One Ear & Out The Other
8.   Cassettesingle
9.   Cylinders

Credits:
Mixed By – Alan Boorman
Producer, Written-By – Fujiya & Miyagi
Recorded By – Julian Tardo
Written-By – Matt Avery

This Brighton trio's third long-player, a singles-compilation-plus, is big fun to overthink. The witty lyrics toss biomatter into the same heap of vague "things" as technomatter; thus you get songs called "Photocopier" and "Cassettesingle" snugly beside songs called "Collarbone" and "Ankle Injuries". Obsessing about F&M's obsession with thingness forces one to conclude that this album is a mysterious relic from an alternate 1971. 
Think about it: In 1971, British writer Alan Watts released Does It Matter?: Essays on Man's Relation to Materiality, in which he argued (among other "things") that humans aren't really true materialists, with our reverence for materials, resources and craft. Rather, he typed, we're abstractists, caught in our preference for stockpiling plastic gewgaws. Transparent Things playfully spoofs and luxuriates in how we're possessed by our possessions. One song's speaker wants to "kick it" with a girl, but first he's "got to get a new pair of shoes." Another's chorus taunts, "I'm just monkeying around with your furniture," after the verse cites spilled "bodily fluids" and how the subject "must be off [his/her] bleeding rocker." In context, "bleeding" suggests actual blood rather than the UK default pejorative. With comic detachment, the lyrics' casual violence contrasts with the music's antiseptic cleanness enough to make one recall the sterile/obscene, bodylike/inorganic sculptures from the milkbar and the murder victim's house in Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (ahem, 1971). 
Anyway: Alan Watts went on to become a Nipponophile, leading temple tours in Japan and even getting accused of faking his enlightenment; Fujiya & Miyagi readily admit their impostorship in a chorus on this album, as if the whole thing was a meticulous piss-take: "We were just pretending to be Japanese." True: Fujiya's a turntable company, and Miyagi's the filmic Okinawan played by Pat Morita who instructs sullen white kids in martial arts. Fujiya & Miyagi presumably relish urban Japan's cultural gizmosis, the fixation with gadgetry and the attention to detail paid even on the level of toy eraser design. F&M's carefully constructed retro-futuristic electronica definitely suggests the quaint, boxy dawn of portable media. And what year did Sony begin selling televisions in Britain, prompting the Time Magazine cover story "Japan, Inc"? That would be 1971.

The "coincidence" continues: Can and Neu! are the acts whose production and syncopation F&M most acefully cop; both acts were either recording or releasing their crucial work in 71. "In One Ear and Out the Other" bounces with Eno-era Roxy Music's eerie psychedelic-lounge sound; yup, they formed and recorded their debut in 71. "Sucking Punch" apes the falsetto vox, pimpy guitar, and whomping, slinky bass of both Curtis Mayfield's 1971-recorded Superfly and Serge Gainsbourg's 1971 LP Historie de Melody Nelson. And the name of the lengthy instrumental that best synthesizes (the 1971-recorded) Kraftwerk 2 with the best of the rest of krautrock's stoner-jazz and metronome-prog? "Conductor 71". 
To be fair, Can and Neu! aren't the only three-letter outfits that F&M echo: This band has processed bits of contemporaries such as Air, DFA/LCD, and BoC. At points, the funk and the unrhyming lyrics even mount to imply various UK greats: A muted Happy Mondays here, a stream-of-consciousness Streets there. And yet, F&M's coy pose comes off as somehow original. David Best doesn't speak-sing about commodities with the abandon of say, Sisqo harmonizing "thong-th-thong-thong-thong," but he also sidesteps the posthuman staidness with which Ladytron tried to address blue jeans and cracked plastic (during "Blue Jeans" and "Cracked Plastic", respectively) back on Light & Magic. 
A kind of consumer-Zen can be heard in the way Best sings the fabulously confident title track's refrain, "I look through transparent things and I feel okay," pronouncing the last word, "O-kehh." Is he talking about seeing through eyeglasses? Drink glasses? Or, by noting the behavioral norms (of litterbugs, cyclists, and college students) and their "grids," "zones," and "boxes," is Best referring to the matrixy systems in which most of us are transparently ensnared? Either way, F&M's execution of old modes is authoritative enough to ward off soundalike syndrome, just as Interpol somehow dodge their ancestors' arrows. 
The album's weaker spots are its louder numbers about actual monogamous desire, which seem banal next to the whispered, anchorless prosaic observations of the songs that would only count as "rave-ups" at some secret librarian party held on a monastery's roof. A group so adept at merely creating an irresistible pulse seems overextended when trying to concoct a banger. I mean, come on, they begin this album with shy in-house brand enthusiasm, chanting "Fujiya" and "Miyagi" in barely audible voices! 
The relatively effete and Euro-centric American poet Wallace Stevens is famously supposed to have said to the relatively dudeish and homelandy American poet Robert Frost, upon meeting: "The trouble with you is you write about things." To which Frost replied: "The trouble with you is you write about bric-a-brac." Via fiery slightness, Fujiya & Miyagi humbly request that you dance to both. 
William Bowers / Pitchfork

Fujiya & Miyagi ‎– Electro Karaoke In The Negative Style (2002)

Style: Indie Rock, Prog Rock, Krautrock, Space Rock, Disco
Format: CD
Label: Massive Advance

Tracklist:
01.   New Accounts Analysts
02.   Rot
03.   King Holer
04.   Simeone Slides
05.   Skinny Punk
06.   Tarr's White Collar
07.   Skeleton Phone Cover
08.   Uptight
09.   Diagrams
10.   Shake
11.   Electro Karaoke
12.   Lolalucamilla

Credits:
Programmed By , Keyboards, Bass, Backing Vocals – Steve Lewis
Vocals, Guitar, Bass – David Best
Written-By, Producer – Fujiya & Miyagi