Showing posts with label Kikagaku Moyo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kikagaku Moyo. Show all posts

Monday, April 11, 2022

Kikagaku Moyo preview Kumoyo Island album with trippy "Cardboard Pile" clip

Here's the sleeve art for Kikagaku Moyo's latest epic Kumoyo Island out May 6th. Watch the video for "Cardboard Pile" below. 


Here's the scoop...

Today, we are pleased to finally reveal the cover of our new album, “Kumoyo Island”. 

“Kumoyo Island” is the fifth studio album & the last euphoric mind-trip to Kikagaku Moyo's imagined island.”

The full album will be released digitally on May 6th , with vinyl available for pre-order. 

An immense thank you to the Dutch artist Gijs Frieling and his family for painting this amazing mural & album artwork that we love so much. 

We are also proud to announce that we released a music video of our first single “Cardboard Pile”, directed by Japanese artist Katsushika Shusshin (who also designs Guruguru Brain’s Obi letterings for our vinyl). 

Watch the "Cardboard Pile" video followed by Kikagaku Moyo's outdoor performance at the PALP Festival in Switzerland back in August 2021 and check out Rolling Stone's recent Kikagaku Moyo feature by Hunter Walker in the links below. 





LINKS

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Kikagaku Moyo, Minami Deutsch @ The Horseshoe, Tuesday

Kikagaku Moyo's ripping cover of Ananda Shankar's "Streets of Calcutta" has become a reliable crowd pleaser on tour.  

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Kikagaku Moyo @ Lee's Palace, Sunday

Kikagaku Moyo will be presenting the music from their new Masana Temples album tonight at Lee's Palace. 

“Masana” is a fictional word created by Kikagaku Moyo to express a Utopian feeling; an existence where everything can interact harmoniously and offer inspiration and understanding. Their fourth album Masana Temples (out now on Guruguru Brain Records) radiates this vision, architecting a vibrating world that isn’t confined to the known limits of what came before it.

Kikagaku Moyo progressed from early days in Tokyo’s experimental scene to traveling the world with their mind-bending sounds, exploring different facets of psychedelia on each new release and blowing minds with a live show that was just as searching as their records. The shifting dimensions of Masana Temples are informed by various experiences the band had with traveling through life together, ranging from the months spent on tour to making a pilgrimage to Lisbon to record the album with jazz musician Bruno Pernadas. The songs came together in the wake of the band breaking up the communal house most of them had shared in Tokyo, with some members relocating to Amsterdam, and others moving to different parts of Japan. Transitioning from being based in the scene they had roots in to scattering around various locales made for an even more enhanced understanding of how mystically connected the sum of their parts were when the band reunited to record new material. The music is the product of time spent in motion and all of the bending mindsets that come with it.

The band sought out Pernadas both out of admiration for his music and in an intentional move to work with a producer who came from a wildly different background. With Masana Temples, the band wanted to challenge their own concepts of what psychedelic music could be. Elements of both the attentive folk and wild-eyed rocking sides of the band are still intact throughout Masana Temples, but they’re sharper and more defined. Without sacrificing any of their experimental impulses, songs are more composed and cohesive. Pernadas’ bright production meets with nearly telepathically locked-in performances, on both lazy cloud-like jaunts like “Nazo Nazo” or fuzzed-out expeditions like lead single “Gatherings”. Drummer/vocalist Go Kurosawa, guitarist/vocalist Tomo Katsurada, bassist Kotsuguy, sitar and keyboard player Ryu Kurosawa and guitarist Daoud Popal Akira act as a unit, with an intuitive attention to space and dynamics that could only come from years of playing together in every imaginable setting.

More than the literal interpretation of being on a journey, the album’s always changing sonic panorama reflects the spiritual connection of the band moving through this all together. Life for a traveling band is a series of constant metamorphoses, with languages, cultures, climates and vibes changing with each new town. The only constant for Kikagaku Moyo throughout their travels were the five band members always together moving through it all, but each of them taking everything in from very different perspectives. Inspecting the harmonies and disparities between these perspectives, the group reflects the emotional impact of their nomadic paths.

Coming together in a way more deliberate than the beautifully floating improvisations of their Stone Garden EP or the sometimes hushed dreamstate of 2016 album House In The Tall Grass, Masana Temples is focused and clear in its vision in a way that feels unlike any of Kikagaku Moyo’s earlier sounds. Listen to the song "Gatherings" below.




Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Earthless, Kikagaku Moyo, JJUUJJUU @ Lee's Palace, Wednesday

Air drummers have been lining up to flail alongside Earthless on their current tour with Kikagaku Moyo. 


Monday, October 3, 2016

Tokyo psych titans Kikagaku Moyo @ The Silver Dollar, Tuesday

Watch Tomo Katsurada & Ryu Kurosawa  tear into Ananda Shankar's Streets Of Calcutta below.