April 24, 2020

Fumio Miyashita – White Morning




1. 目覚め (See The Light)


 
               Bass line greets us with  A, D, D, Lower D.  The bass provides a sparse feathered anchor of tonality, never deviating but peeking its head every now and again through the composition.  It’s such a COZY timbre, as if being blanketed with cotton soft ethereal clouds, warm as sun.

               Synth pad undulates below us, subtle layer of fog as we fly above.  Synth pad steadily air currents on a drone of A, D, A.  This is an approximation, but there are certainly no chordal texture notes here, just some combination of the Root and the perfect 5th.  

               So far both the bass and the synth pad are giving us a similar flavor; airy whipped mist with a delicately light palate.

               Synth lead comes into being as if from out of nowhere, parks it on an F#, the major 3rd of the implied harmony from the bass and pad!, and proceeds touch on A, C#, to D, outlining the full D major 7 arpeggio.  There it is, tonal harmony of the tune fully established in one blessed whisper.

               After the bass line, synth lead follows suit, C# down to A, then G to A, playing with a modal flavor (the relative A mixolydian, AKA a subtle outline of an A7 chord), then resolves down to F#.
               Next line: F#, G, A, C#, D, G, A, F#.

               The lead continues like this for the duration of the song.  Miyashita is playing with an Indian Raga feeling, sticking to a reduced D major scale.  He’s specifically using the notes, D, F#, G, A, C#.  Harold Budd also plays like this.  The limited note choice helps zone in on a specific feeling or color.  The use of the G note in this scale is what gives is that Indian flare.  Tension is created by holding on the C# or the G notes, D is the ultimate resolve, F# and A partial resolves. 

               Fun to try at home!  If you play guitar, tune to drop D (DADGBE) and play with this scale while occasionally hitting the Low D note.  Let it breathe, take your time and FEEL each note.  Don’t be afraid to go slowly, let the music unfold naturally.  It is totally normal to lose track of time and fall into a wormhole.




2.  朝の祈り (Morning Prayer)

 
               Bass : F, C, F, D, High A.

               Synth Pad: Combination of F and C.

               Chimes : F, G, A, Low D. Then F, G, A, C.


We see a lot of similarities here.  Tonal center is some kind of F major, as depicted by the bass and synth pad.  This time the bass plays more of a harmonic role, in that it outlines a fuller scale.

               A slight deviation with the synth lead!  Starts out playing a riff like F, Bb, A, G, A.  Pretty much outlining F major tonality,  We see a lot of Bb in here, the suspended 4th.  It’s weird that the melody doesn’t often play the D note, but the bass does every time.  Also worth noting, the scale is note as confined as the first song.  The lead plays the full spectrum F Major scale; F, G, A, Bb, C, D , E, F, though it doesn’t emphasize the E or D notes as much.  So it’s not totally exclusive in its note selection like the previous song.  That riff, F, Bb, A, G, A, seems to be the main theme that’s built on.  Interesting how plaintiff the theme is and the song is titled “Morning Prayer”, a beckoning to the Gods.



              
Big ideas for Miyashita’s “White Morning”:

               -Soft tones
               -Slow breathing pace
               -Limited note selection within key
               -Static harmony, interest is within melodic meanderings

July 9, 2019

Ken Muramatsu - Green Thoughts

 
 
 
Did the Air(tv) anime get a second season?  Cause this is it’s OST.  Ken Muramatsu’s jazz shaded classical compositions infuse a backdrop of drum machines and synthetic lower bottom bass sounds with crisp keys to form Green Thoughts, an anonymity of a sound at times imitating summer days or tree bark through the longings of major 7 and minor 9 voicings straightly laid out.

               Alternatively, Green Thoughts = Plantasia?  Either way, we are blessed with such masterpiece. 




1.     緑のささやく

 A radiant mid-morning at an anime park; Misuzu’s hidden Summer.  Flippant bold blocked rising sun spirals happiness throughout the Air while faceless strangers blend into the living painting.  The day is healthy.  The day is filled with major 7’s and minor 9’s, but we are groovy.

Chord progression includes lots of diatonic jazz stuff in C major.  Lots of D-7,   G13,   G (b13), E-7, F maj 7. 
Key change to Db major towards end of jam.



2.     出逢いと別

               Misuzu’s Stoll.  A déjà-vu of a moment that has been tinted with foreshadow unknowingly because the future hasn’t happened yet.  Light and breezy. 
               Lots of chill jazz 7th chords.  D maj7 , B – 7, F# - 7, A -7 D7, G maj…etc. etc.



3.    陽だま

               The pre-tragedy, Misuzu’s confession.  Night time, deeply threaded conversation of care and emotion between two. 


4.    いつか森の中
 

               WOW screech of the midnight Bats, minor.  Misuzu’s lively night.  Maybe it’s Potato’s disappearance.  Ya silly pup where you off to?
               Ends like a track on Budd’s Avalon Sutra.


5.    グリーン・シャワ

               Misuzu’s rainbow.  A dazzling morning spirits us with rainbow.  We are invigorated in the same way of a plant’s posture. Echo baby!
               “You know I’m jokin’, babe?”



6.    晴れた午後に

               Misuzu’s puppet show.  Wonky donky button nosed puppets sloppily perform Greek tragedy.  We are doofuses, we are comedic.  Or, some sort of argumentative conversation.



7.    哀しみは喜びととも

               Misuzu’s nightmare.  The bizarre, stressful kind of nightmare, not gory or monster types.  The verse has the tone, “and that is what happens to the boy who cries ‘wolf’”, describing a moral to the story after a negative outcome.  Tan brown, Walsh faerie tale-ish. 



8.    水平線の見える部

               Misuzu’s horizon.  Sun peeps through blinds and we have a morning.



               Do a lot of these anime inspired jazz/classical soundtracks tend to be in non-jazz keys (Bb, Eb, F)??  Does this album beckon a resurgence of Key anime releases?  The world may never know.  Green Thoughts is a digitally drawn upbeat chillax wonderland of the paradox of Summer day anime land where it never feels too hot.  Keeping it cool Mr. Muramatsu.

July 2, 2019

Chihei Hatakeyama - Dark Sea

Chihei @ discogs.com
Chihei @ bandcamp.com





              Swirling souls maelstromate back to the source.  Whirlpools and whirlpools of recycled life energy funneling towards the next level of existence.  

               Holy Celestial envoy trumpets the transition of old life into new.  20 angels in major.

               Dark Siders plummet upon the pipe organ.

               As the energies blend towards the funnel, memories of past lives mesh and overlap each other.

               Every note of life is oozing out at once, gelatinous, amorphous, slimy, goopy, glowy translucent consciousness aural smoothie.


June 3, 2019

Takashi Kokubo (小久保隆) - Solar Wind ~ Mystery Of Aurora ~ (太陽風~オーロラの神秘~)

 
 
1.  White Ambient


               Night swirls and mixes with a charming breeze as they both meander their respective paths.  Light hearted mischief sprinkles from above encouraging fox to tease middle aged men on their way home, walking by the field of tall grass.

               Atop the hill, a view spanning downward and outward of perky swaying grass blades in the blue of 8pm mid spring followed by endless oceans, reflecting moon and stars; double cosmos.  The water is calm, rivaled only by the placid sky.  Small stars twinkle, winkle, wink for the people below.

               Fire flies hover on the slope just out of reach above the grass.  Spring Peepers provide a thin background chorus, somewhat mimicking the starlight above.



               White Ambient has a long, slow form that repeats a bunch, key changes, repeats on that, then goes back to original key.  Takashi Kokubo likes to create intricate soundscape swirls and shift them entirely.
              





The A section is as follows:


||: C maj 7  |   C maj 7  |   C maj 7  |   C maj 7  |     
|B-11          |  B-11        |  B7            |  B7           |
|C maj 7    | C maj 7    |  C maj 7    |  C maj 7    |
|E -            |  E -            |  E -            |  E -            |
|Eb maj 7 |  Eb maj 7  |  G maj/B  |  G maj/B  |
|Bb maj7 (#11) | Bb maj7 (#11) |  G7       |   G7     :||



               Lots of cool stuff going on here.  The intro echo sparkle riff plays G, D, F, E, D, C, D, B G.  Pretty cool how Kokubo outlines G7 (G D F) over the opening C maj 7 chord.  At the end of that riff he outlines G maj arpeggio (D B G).  Neat stuff.  The emphasis in the melody is G major, even though the harmony is C major 7.  Thumbs up (n.n)b !

               Over the C major chord there’s a wind instrument riff that trills around with B, C, B G and let’s that ring out for a while.

               During the B-11 chord (Could be Bsus4), some riff emphasizes A and E notes, which then resolve down to D# for the B7 chord.

               C major 7 comes up again and Kokubo plays some cool voicing that sounds like world map theme in Legend of Mana.

               E- chord time, some vague descending 3rds riff happening briefly.

               Super cool half step resolve to Eb major 7.  There’s a melody in here playing G, F, Eb, F, G, Bb A G.  Nails the G right when the chord changes to G maj /B (I think that’s what that is, hard to pin point it, very misty).

               More voice leading, B in the bass goes down to Bb and resolves to Bb major 7 chord.  There’s a brief Lydian melody here that, similar to the previous chord change, resolves down into G 7.
               And that’s the form!  After this wondrous summer breeze passes by a few times, star wash fades out on the G7 and BOOM, he shifts the entire form up a whole step.  Instead of starting on C major 7, song starts on D major 7.  Big dramatic key change, and the higher key changes the timbre of the full piece, some chords stand out a little better/differently.  

               After a few repeats in D major, song shifts back down to original C major.  This happens a few times, finally White Ambient fades out on G7.






2.  Solar Wind



               The middle aged man, lost in day dream gazing out at the sea – star divide, awakens and realizes he’s late for dinner; his wife waiting for him.  With a lighthearted heightened pace, he continues his way home.

               The blue of night conforms to black, visibility is low and blurry; the blurry distant amber apartment lights crisp in the air the nearer they become.  Crystals of clarity solidify and evaporate here and there in the air.

               Lots of repeating in Solar Wind.  Got some fast walking paced guitar bumping here.  Form is as follows:


               || D7sus  | D7sus  | D7sus    | D7sus |
               |  E7sus   |  E7sus   |E7sus   |E7sus    |
               |D7sus  | D7sus  | D7sus    | D7sus   |
               |C7sus  |  C7sus   |C7sus    |C7sus     ||


This bit repeats for the entirety of Solar Wind.  The D7sus voicing uses notes like D, A, B, G, B ,C , and sometimes E.  This pattern shifts up and down accordingly to fit the other sus chords.  

               Some choir/synth pad sounds creep up throughout, and all the various leads and percussive parts emphasis the sussy notesl the 4ths and 13ths.  Prolly this song is a little more contained since the previous one was such a wild adventure.





3.  Catalyst


               All is silent in the depths of night.  Every conscious being is asleep.  The earth slowly inhales and exhales, subtle winds flow down empty streets, weaving between trees, scattering the occasional leaf.

               A fantasy triumphs briefly in the dreams of children accompanied by innocent talking in sleep and shifting in bed.

               Cooling, restful darkness envelopes all in her womb.  Like a plant gathering sunlight to grow, everything is in a state of inactivity, of filtering away clutter and brain moosh, of emptying the mind to renew itself for tomorrow.

               Catalyst, maybe named for that intense end section, is a fiery humid final excursion in the Solar Wind soundfield.  The form:


|| G maj add 9  |  D-9    |  F maj7 (#11)  |   C maj 7    |
| G maj add 9  |  D-9    |  F maj7 (#11)  |   C maj 7    ||
||G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7      |
|G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        |
|G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        |
|G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        | G maj 7        |
| C-                 | C-                 |  F#-               | F# -                 |
|E maj 7/G#  | E maj7/G#  |  F# -             |F# -                  ||

               Then repeats from the top.  But this time when it reached the end, goes to :

||C-               |C-                   |  F#-                    | F#-             |
|C maj 7/E   |  C maj7/E     |  F#7                  |  F#7          ||


Please excuse if my repetitions are off.  Trippy song form, lots of arid vibes happening in that minor chord section, some super wonky changes.  What a scorcher to end it on!

In that middle G major 7 stretch, melody is something like , G, F#, E, D, C ,B , B, C, D, E , B, descending for that first bit, then ascending.  Then it follows the same pattern but starts on the B note.  Later when this section repeats it’s accompanied by a harmonizing line in 3rds.  Kokubo likes his internal structures.

At the end, we get another star wash fade out and we are left with a brief Aurora Borealis as the Solar Wind pulls in tide.