Takahiro Kido Track.1+6+8 Composed by Recorded & Mixed by Art Direction & Design by |
Piano - Programming - Organ - Glockenspiel - Melodion... Yuki Murata Takahiro Kido + Yuki Murata Takahiro Kido |
| Track.3 = a.m.4:20 | |
about "re-Silence"
アメリカのImportant Recordsより全世界デビューし、昨年リリースしたセカンドアルバム"Out of Season"がアメリカの音楽サイトThe Silent Balletで年間トップ15アルバムに選ばれたAnoiceの2人の天才コンポーザーTakahiro KidoとYuki Murataによる奇跡的なまでに美しいコラボレーション作品"re-Silence"が完成!コンサートホールや某国民的アニメーション映画の舞台になった一軒家を借りての、グランドピアノや足踏みオルガンなどの生楽器と、少しの電子音による即興演奏は鳥肌モノの緊張感です!特に坂本龍一が賞賛した表題曲"re-silence"やAnoiceのUtaka Fujiwaraがヴィオラで参加した"a.m.5:20"の即興演奏を軸に組み立てられた美しさや"shining"などの楽曲で聴ける、弦に電磁波を当てて演奏されたグランドピアノの、これまでにない澄んだ音色は必聴です!ソニックユース+mono+シルヴァン・ショヴーォーらも絶賛する最高の音質の素晴らしい作品です☆ポストクラシカル/エレクトロニカ/現代音楽ファンだけでなく、ドビュッシー/ペルトなどのクラシック好きにもオススメの1枚です!
= Ricco Label
The name Takahiro Kido doesn’t really need much of an introduction around here. Having been featured as an Artist of the Week and in the Tracks of the Week charts, he’s no stranger to these parts. In fact, over the past weeks, this guy's name has been bandied about like a platter of sandwiches at a retirement home party.
Anoice, Mokyow, and Cru are all ensembles that name-check this ambidextrous musician as a vital ingredient, and rightly so. This time around Kido has hooked up with Yuki Murata under the Cru moniker to create a collection of delicate textures, hues of a contemplative timbre speckled with fragile ivories and other miscellaneous instruments. re-Silence is a medley of reflective pieces recorded anywhere from concert halls to fields, strangely enough, and lacquered at a later point with layers of sound for your aural pleasure.
My trusty companion for the past number of days, re-Silence has fittingly sound-tracked the loneliness of deserted evening offices to crowded asphalt walkways in the rain. If you’re looking for something chipper then I’d pass, but if a thought provoking work of spectral beauty is your thing then Robert's your father's brother! Ha-ha-hah…
From the offset, re-Silence takes no prisoners, immediately arresting the very breath by way of pearl drop piano resonating with almost childlike innocence over a sparse canvass. “Sea” is a frugal piece per se, but I can’t help feel that the artist has an exceptional eye for beauty in the mundane. Stuttered shifting background tones that remind me of someone toying with a damaged earphone cable to subtle panning and micro-minimal electronic tenderness – there’s a delicate yet intricately constructed tapestry of splintered sounds woven beneath the consistency of tinkling ivories.
Throughout the album it’s these random and delicious intricacies that spark the imagination, providing both magic and wonder. A detailed undercoat exists as a wonderfully crafted buffer for the melody to hover above. The intriguing tones of “Stella,” for example, are made all the more poignant against a hushed backdrop of muffled rain. Each time I listen to it I envisage a simplistic Walt Disney scullery scene with ghosts composing motifs on a wineglass Marimba.
Like theme music for a bush tucker buffet, “Tree” is a collection of knocks and snuffled shufflings at a tribal gathering, serving as a deus ex machina that snaps us from the droning stringed melancholy of “AM 4.20.” The most aptly named piece, “Wind” is a movement of gently undulating tones like sombre gusts in the hollows. Mimicking the mournful cadence of a twilight zephyr, it’s a haunting midpoint punctuation where the melody sways like flotsam and jetsam.
The influences overall seem grounded in the natural world, with the sea, wind, rain, moonlight, darkness, trees, and mist all referenced in the song titles. And just like nature itself, the direction is oft unpredictable, which makes for an enchanting journey. It’s the equivalent of a water color painting – a subtle arrangement of emotions that wash into each other without undermining the flux of the album, with each listen throwing up a new favorite.
Consummating with the achingly delicate notes of “Shining,” re-Silence is a splendid artistic endeavor. Meandering skilfully between ideas and instruments, it’s a varied easel, but not one that lacks appeal. The classically tinted piano frills counteract the sombre façade that exists courtesy of forlorn organs and various synthetic background pastels, balancing the album's feel and withholding it from becoming overly lachrymose. Melodeon also lends an old world feel in “Darkside” that smacks of a gypsy lament accompanying a brooding organ, just another tint in the spectrum of varied sounds that make this a thoroughly enjoyable experience.
Virtually beatless except for the soft tribal throbs of "Tree,” re-Silence is not as flamboyant as Fleursy Music and harbors more dynamic appeal and mystery than In My Time. While minimal in build, re-Silence is a more intense affair. I’d pitch it with Remmings by Anoice, not for style, but insofar as containing select moments of profound beauty that surface throughout. Blending ambient-esque passages and delicate tinkling musings, it’s what you might call a coffee table think-piece for a day you throw a house party and nobody shows up.
Takahiro can lay claim to many great musical endeavors, but at this juncture I’m in the court of the Cru. re-Silence treads a softer footfall with an air of hushed mystique, what you might call piquant. While not wanting to discredit other related projects (Takahiro and Yuki are the main composers of Anoice) they shine brightest in the simplistically improvisational work found here. For those of you who appreciate the indulgence of melancholia and enjoy relaxing, therapeutic sounds, then buy it and save it for a rainy day - it’ll make it all the more meaningful.
=James Crossan - The Silent Ballet
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Anoiceの2人のメインコンポーザーTakahiro KidoとYuki Murataによる活動不定期ユニット。ピアノ+足踏みオルガン+チェンバロ+ヴィオラなどのアコースティック楽器と、その楽器の音色から加工して作られた電子音を中心にした美しい楽曲を制作している。Ricco Labelよりリリースされたファーストアルバム"re-Silence"の制作は、コンサートホールを借りてのピアノ演奏や、東京郊外の森の中の一軒家を借りてのオルガン+チェンバロ演奏など、音に強いこだわりを持って行われた。ピアノの弦に電磁波を当てて持続音を取り出したり、自作のおもちゃ楽器の使用など、実験的な面もある。
cruのオフィシャルウェブサイトはこちら▶www.fleursy.com/cru


















