Kuwabara shows her passionate, delicate and yet rock-solid—even manly—style of piano playing to great effect on every tune.
Read MoreIt’s rare that band members fit together so well and seem to take such great delight in the music they create as one. But that in-sync, easy-going, laid-back sound is a real treat, equal parts fun and intense.
Read MoreThis CD of big band jazz is quite unusual. Jazz musicians usually turn to passion or love affairs for inspiration, but this recording turns to Japanese history.
Read MoreA few instruments and an endless supply of creative energy are what produce the best soundscapes.
Read MoreEQ has been making straight-on, soul-satisfying jazz for a long time. This release finds them at the top of their game.
Read MoreWith a mixture of elegance and energy, the trio delivers ten originals that are a pleasure to listen to.
Read MoreShe’s not out to impress, she’s out to create beauty.
Read MoreBloodest Saxophone jumps into the beat and squeals and groans with so much pleasure it’s impossible not to be infected with their lust for a musical good time.
Read MoreYoshio Suzuki’s excellent release, “Generation Gap,” starts out not with a generation gap but a cultural gap: traditional Japanese wadaiko drums bumping under a dirty blues trumpet line.
Read MoreThe back cover of Mike Henderson’s excellent new blues CD is taken up with a photo of a 1959 Fender Bassman guitar amp. The amp’s tubes must be glowing red and sweating hard.
Read MoreThe outing is a straight-ahead gem.
Read MoreCountry blues fingerpicked on acoustic guitar has no better player in Japan than Tokio Uchida.
Read MorePut simply, his playing creates stunningly gorgeous music.
Read MoreYamamoto’s sleek, straight-ahead CD kicks off with “Bohemia After Dark” and stays in that cool bop groove for the next ten cuts. The recording lays down robust
Read MoreThis interlinked set of compositions dig right into various grooves that let everyone in the band lean forward and play. The original composition, more one composition then the ten listings suggest, flow
Read MoreAfter the first listen to “Dojo,” I was pleased to see the old Japanese phrase that roughly translates as “Volume One.” Inside the powerful music these two intense musical personalities create on “Dojo”
Read MoreNot only are the titles taken from European places, artworks and experiences, but the sounds themselves are like a travel journey of melodies, rhythms, impressions and feelings.
Read MoreShe jumped onstage for the last song in the evening, a chance always saved by musicians for their most promising students. She has made good on that early promise and then some.
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