Monday, February 3, 2025

Eiji Nakayama - 1978 - Aya's Samba

Eiji Nakayama
1978
Aya's Samba



01. Aya's Samba 6:32
02. Yellow Living 9:53
03. See Sea Town 9:48
04. Far-away Road. 8:08

Bass – Eiji Nakayama
Drums – Takaaki Atsumi
Piano – Atsushi Sakuraba
Tenor Saxophone – Kenji Takahashi

Recorded on February 2, 1978.



Beautiful grooves from a cool Japanese group -- one led by bassist Eiji Nakayama, with some great electric piano and tenor sax in the lineup too! The tracks are long, and relatively open-ended -- kind of in the Three Blind Mice label style of the period, but with an even more contemplative feel -- especially on some of the piano lines, which get nice and blocky -- really feeling their way into space, as the tenor sax comes into the mix to carve out a few more edges!

I'd never had as much joy getting into samba as I have bossa nova (sorry Chico Buarque, sorry Luis Bonfa), but this here jazzthing takes everything strident and sensual I like about samba rhythms and pares it back to a relatively sparse jazz quartet arrangement without any of the florid melodic trappings that have imposed a low ceiling for me in the past. The bookending tracks explore this samba-jazz fusion most vibrantly, while the middle two are mellow jazz loungers. "See Sea Town" is the most ambitious piece of the two, culminating in a long, erratic solo from saxophonist Kenji Takahashi, but his playing across the "Misty"-esque slowburner "Yellow Living" might just be the greater highlight: this one's demure stylings accentuate the grit in his rather dry tone better than anything else on the record. Nakayama’s double bass is the star of the show, however: I love, love, love the way he carries these grooves but maintains such a vibrant melodic dialogue with his bandmates.

Anyhow, four substantive tracks in 35-minutes also gives this tremendous binge value that I’ve exploited with relish – I've explored a hell of a lot more jazz since first hearing this, but it remains an easy go-to. It was also reportedly the inspiration behind the Japanese jazz label Johnny's Disk, so chalk up a handful of legacy points if this is something that matters to you. Great record.

Katsuyuki Itakura - 1982 - Umineko No Shima

Katsuyuki Itakura
1982
Umineko No Shima




01. 噂のやまびこ
02. 種山ヶ原の羊
03. 海猫の島
04. 三陸縦貫鉄道の夜
05. 日本ジャズ街のピアノハンマー
06. 朝日の如くさわやかに

Piano – Katsu Yuki Itakura
Recorded on June 3, 1982 at Johnny, Rikuzentakata



Katsuyuki Itakura (板倉克行, Itakura Katsuyuki, b. Taiwan, 1943 - January 10, 2014), nicknamed Katsu, is a Japanese free jazz pianist. He made his debut in 1962 and has made ten recordings. He has performed throughout Japan, as well as in the United States and in Europe. In 1995 he performed in London for the 15th anniversary of Leo Records. In 2000 he performed at the Florida Jazz and Blues Festival.

Itakura began studying classical music at the age of 7. His work combines composition and improvisation and is often humorous in nature. He has performed or recorded with Kenny Millions, Peter Brötzmann, Dave Holland, Scott Robinson, Bruce Eisenbeil and Stephen Flinn.