
Blank Forms Editions
Kazuki Tomokawa - Finally, His First Album
Regular price £27.00 Save £-27.00Product Description
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At
the
tender
age
of
twenty-five,
while
he
was
working
part-time
at
an
Italian
restaurant
in
Tokyo's
Kamata
district,
Kazuki
Tomokawa
released
his
debut
record,
fittingly
titled
Finally,
His
First
Album.
While
he
had
already
penned
hundreds
of
songs,
including
his
first
single
"Try
Saying
You're
Alive!,"
written
on
a
long
train
ride
past
fields
and
rice
paddies,
it
was
this
recording
that
introduced
Japan
to
one
of
its
most
unique
musicians
of
the
postwar
era.
Each
track,
as
record
label
exec
Kiichi
Takahara
writes
in
the
LP's
liner
notes
(here
translated
for
the
first
time),
is
not
a
song
but
a
"flesh-and-blood
human
being,"
birthed
by
the
singer-songwriter
and
the
raw,
guttural
cries
that
would
become
a
hallmark
of
his
incomparable
sound.
1970s
Japan
was
a
time
and
place
marked
by
a
profound
desire
for
authenticity
amidst
the
onset
of
television
and
media
saturation.
Tomokawa
arrived
on
the
scene
as
a
musician
with
"the
personality
of
a
hydrogen
bomb,"
to
borrow
a
phrase
from
his
frequent
collaborator
Toshi
Ishizuka.
In
an
unwieldy
interview
included
here,
members
of
the
notorious
leftist
band
Zun?
Keisatsu
(Brain
Police)
put
it
bluntly:
here
was
a
man
surrounded
by
the
"disingenuous,"
the
"wishy-washy,"
and
the
"superficial,"
who
was
delivering
"real
life,
unvarnished."
These
songs
are
lullabies
for
the
lost,
staring
not
into
the
void
but—as
the
fourth
track
declares—from
inside
it.
Finally,
His
First
Album
is
the
first
of
three
Tomokawa
records
to
be
reissued
by
Blank
Forms
Editions
in
conjunction
with
the
US
release
of
Tomokawa's
memoir,
Try
Saying
You're
Alive!,
the
first-ever
English
translation
of
his
writing.
This
debut
captures
the
self-assured
trademarks
that
Tomokawa
would
hone
over
the
course
of
decades.
Multiple
tracks
are
performed
in
his
native
Akita
dialect,
a
distinct
and
highly
regional
vernacular
of
northern
Japan
seldom
heard
outside
the
prefecture—and
even
more
rarely
heard
in
music.
Tomokawa's
lyrics
locate
profound
interiority
in
the
rituals
of
everyday
life,
and
are
sung
against
sparse
folk
arrangements
of
tender,
lilting
chords—a
prelude
to
the
rock
and
electronic
stylings
to
come
in
later
years.
A
self-proclaimed
"living
corpse,"
Tomokawa
wallows,
whispers,
shouts,
and
cries,
yet
still,
through
his
existential
doubt,
asks
to
be
heard.
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