What are you listening to?

Out of context: Reply #19121

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  • Nairn6

    • I've never done this (except sarcastically) but I've just upvoted my own post here.

      How have I never heard this before?
      Nairn
    • It's from fucking 1983.

      Nineteen. Eighty. Three.
      Nairn
    • There's a lot of good Japanese ambient music from this era.yuekit
    • Definite strands of her work in Susumu Yokota's work, I now realise.Nairn
    • lots of was commissioned by big corps - https://www.theguard…Fax_Benson
    • I don't get the 1983 referencecanoe
    • Two things, I guess - 1st: It's taken me nearly 4 decades to hear this; 2nd: it's got a timeless quality - I could as easily imagine this being a fresh release.Nairn
    • CAN all over this; CAN did all this in 1968Krassy
    • link pls?Nairn
    • OK, misspoke. Actually CAN 1973: https://www.youtube.…Krassy
    • Also Brian Eno 1980: https://www.youtube.…Krassy
    • @krassy - thanks for that. 'Can' seems like an entirely different kind of trip for me, but a worthwhile one I'd not come across before, so thank you!Nairn
    • Hang on, you have never heard Can? :-o midori takada okay, this is an old fav of mine but only got huge when it was reissued in 2016. Can are the greatest.kingsteven
    • but yeah, they're nothing alike. Japanese minimalism is more comparable to 60's modern classical avant than kosmischekingsteven
    • @kingsteven links to examples of "60's modern classical avant" pleaseKrassy
    • Charles Ives -> Moondog -> John Cage -> Steve Reich, La Monte Young, Pauline Oliveros, Terry Riley, Philip Glasskingsteven
    • Can are a generation after... as inspired by beatles, hendrix, amon duul psychedelic rock as they were with the above. While there is amazing Japanese psychkingsteven
    • Funny, I know all of those, and many from generations after, but Can themselves? Never 'eard of 'em.Nairn
    • and fuzz from the same era I don't think there's a comparable Japanese band to Roxy, Can, Kraftwerk until YMO (i'd love to be proved wrong)kingsteven
    • i always think with the exception of harry hosono and a few others, this 80s music skips a generation again and has it's roots in jazz, Japanese traditional,kingsteven
    • American minimalism and the sound digital synthesisers. About as far from rock n' roll as you can get...kingsteven
    • Heh sorry, got interrupted by a phone call half way through that :D The members of Can individually are all incredible too. You've heard of Jaki Liebezeit,kingsteven
    • Holger Czukay, Irmin Schmidt, Damo Suzuki maybe? honestly you have hours of amazing music to listen to for the first time, i'm quite jealous.kingsteven
    • '71 -> '78 in my Japan music knowledge is Isao Tomita, Flower Traveling Band and nothing between. Doing some homework and listening to Japan Blues NTS mixes hahkingsteven
    • I wish I could +1 KingSteven's sidenotes.Nairn

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