Aguirre
Seikatsu Kōjyō Iinkai - Seikatsu Kōjyō Iinkai
Regular price $38.00 Save $-38.00Product Description
-
Ferocious
JP
/
US
free
jazz
bomb.
A
rare
meeting
between
the
NYC
free
jazz
scene
and
the
Japanese
free
music
scene.
Old-style
Gatefold
LP,
with
rare
photographs
&
liner
notes
by
Alan
Cummings.
Following
hot
on
the
heels
of
the
first,
mid-sixties
generation
of
Japanese
free
jazz
players
like
Kaoru
Abe,
Masayuki
Takayanagi,
Yōsuke
Yamashita,
Motoharu
Yoshizawa,
etc.,
an
exciting
second
wave
of
younger
players
began
to
emerge
in
the
seventies.
Two
of
its
leading
members
were
the
saxophonist
Kazutoki
Umezu
and
multi-instrumentalist
Yoriyuki
Harada.
Both
were
post-war
babies
and
immigrants
to
the
city,
Umezu
from
Sendai
in
the
north
and
Harada
from
Shimane
in
the
west.
They
first
met
as
students
in
the
clarinet
department
at
the
Kunitachi
College
of
Music,
a
well-known
conservatory
in
western
Tokyo.
Harada
was
already
securing
sideman
gigs
on
bass
with
professional
jazz
groups
and
was
active
in
6
student
politics,
making
good
use
of
his
connections
to
set
up
jazz
concerts
on
campus.
It
was
around
this
time
that
the
two
began
to
play
together
in
an
improvised
duo,
with
Umezu
on
clarinet
and
bass
clarinet
and
Harada
on
piano.
They
also
experimented
with
graphic
scores
and
prepared
piano.
These
experiments
eventually
led
to
the
creation
of
a
trio,
with
a
high-school
student
called
Tetsuya
Morimura
on
drums,
that
they
decided
to
name
Seikatsu
Kōjyō
Iinkai
(Lifestyle
Improvement
Committee)
in
joking
reference
to
the
Marxist
discourse
of
the
student
radicals
of
the
time.
Around
1973,
Umezu
and
Harada
decided
to
call
it
a
day
and
go
their
separate
ways.
Umezu
began
playing
with
the
Toshinori
Kondo
Unit
and
Harada
with
the
Tadashi
Yoshida
Quintet.
In
1974
Harada
formed
his
own
trio
and
began
to
play
at
jazz
coffeehouses
across
Japan.
Then,
in
September
1974
Umezu
travelled
alone
to
New
York,
where
he
set
about
building
connections
with
the
loft
jazz
scene
in
the
city.
It
was
a
fortuitous
moment
to
arrive
in
New
York.
Rents
were
cheap
in
the
Lower
East
Side,
possibilities
for
squatting
existed,
so
many
musicians
and
artists
had
moved
to
the
area.
Umezu
soon
became
known
on
the
scene
as
Kappo
and
he
started
to
make
connections
with
some
of
the
young
musicians
like
David
Murray,
Arthur
Blythe,
and
Oliver
Lake.
He
recalls
making
the
rounds
of
the
lofts
every
evening,
checking
out
the
performances,
and
getting
the
chance
to
sit
in
with
many
groups
including
Juma
Sultan’s
Aboriginal
Music
Society
and
trumpeter
Ted
Daniel’s
orchestra.
Things
were
going
so
well
that
Umezu
wrote
to
Harada
and
invited
him
to
come
to
New
York.
He
accepted
and
arrived
in
the
city
in
July
1975.
Harada
and
Umezu
took
the
opportunity
to
resume
their
artistic
collaboration.
Their
first
concert
together
in
over
two
years
took
place
on
July
20th
at
another
loft,
Sunrise
Studios
at
122
2nd
Avenue.
Umezu
remembers
Sunrise
as
an
unusually
sunny
loft
with
the
rarest
of
things,
a
grand
piano.
He
invited
along
Ahmed
Abdullah,
a
trumpeter
he
had
got
to
know
while
playing
with
Ted
Daniel.
Abdullah
led
his
own
group
and
was
a
long-term
Sun
Ra
sideman.
William
Parker,
one
of
the
key
figures
in
the
loft
jazz
scene
of
the
period,
was
on
bass.
Abdullah
also
brought
along
Rashid
Sinan
on
drums.
Sinan
drummed
in
Abdullah’s
units
throughout
the
seventies,
but
he
had
also
played
on
Frank
Lowe’s
immortal
Black
Beings
album
and
collaborated
with
Arthur
Doyle,
playing
on
Doyle’s
Alabama
Feeling
album.
By
all
accounts
the
evening
was
a
huge
success,
with
speed
and
dynamism
of
Harada’s
piano
playing
gaining
him
lots
of
support.
Since
they
had
managed
to
save
some
money
from
their
day
jobs,
Umezu
and
Harada
decided
to
set
up
a
recording
session
with
the
same
line-up
on
August
11
at
Studio
We,
where
there
was
a
well-equipped
studio
on
the
third
floor.
Umezu
recalls
the
session
as
follows,
Of
course,
we
recorded
our
performances
in
one
take,
with
zero
retakes
as
far
as
I
remember.
On
all
the
tracks
we
recorded,
we
moved
as
one
unit,
sharp
and
fast.
That
was
the
nature
of
Lifestyle
Improvement
Committee,
New
York
Branch.
Umezu
and
Harada
would
later
become
known
for
the
elements
of
parody
and
entertainment
that
they
brought
to
their
music,
a
freewheeling
blend
of
pastiche,
humour
and
on-stage
performativity
that
paralleled
the
approaches
of
the
Art
Ensemble,
Sun
Ra,
and
Holland’s
ICP.
But
here,
on
their
first
recordings,
the
humour
element
is
not
yet
present.
Instead,
there
is
a
febrile
sense
of
joy
in
creation
and
connection.
On
the
Umezu-penned
“Kim”,
for
example,
Harada
opens
the
piece
with
a
speedy
exploration
of
the
full-range
of
the
keyboard,
hitting
hard
on
the
bass
keys
to
create
a
rhythmic
bed
out
of
which
patterns
begin
to
emerge.
Umezu
enters
at
a
much
slower
pace,
longer
held
notes
that
at
first
float
weightlessly
over
the
urgency
of
the
piano
before
they
begin
in
splinter
and
accelerate.
When
Parker
and
Sinan
kick
in,
it’s
a
rollicking
tempo
with
Parker
plucking
deep
and
hard
and
the
left-handed
Sinan
skittering
hard
across
the
topside
of
his
kit.
Abdullah
kicks
in
a
glorious
solo
twelve
minutes
in,
bright
and
breathy
at
once.
The
piece
slows
and
grows
more
spacious
towards
the
end,
giving
Parker
a
chance
to
showcase
some
arco
work
that
shades
beautifully
into
the
air
against
Abdullah’s
trumpet.
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