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Haruomi Hosono

N.D.E.

Rush Hour

RH-STORE JPN 10

2LP Black $38
  • First ever vinyl pressing of N.D.E.
  • Pressed on black double vinyl
  • Featuring Goh Hotoda, Yasuhiko Terada, Yasuaki Shimizu, Bill Laswell & François Kevorkian…
  • Cut at 33rpm
  • Remastered
  • NO SALES TO JAPAN

Description

First ever vinyl pressing of Haruomi Hosono’s full album N.D.E. Featuring Goh Hotoda, Yasuhiko Terada, Yasuaki Shimizu, Bill Laswell & François Kevorkian. Big TIP!

Ever since his days as a pioneer of Japanese electronic music in the 1970s, Haruomi Hosono has constantly pushed forwards musically. The 1990s was a particularly fertile decade for the Yellow Magic Orchestra co-founder. Following two decades spent creating and releasing innovative electronic pop, imaginary sound worlds, and inspirational ambient music, Hosono established the Daisyworld label to showcase cutting-edge ambient, techno, and electronica, while also embarking on a wide range of often overlooked collaborative projects.

N.D.E., one of the headiest, most psychedelic, evocative, and gently mind-altering albums in Hosono’s vast discography, is one such project. It formed part of a run of albums that saw the Japanese producer embrace contemporaneous influences – think Spacetime Continuum-style ambient techno, DJ Spooky-esque illbient, weighty ambient dub, and the "ambient house" antics of The Orb – in his own inimitable, far-sighted style.

He was ably assisted on N.D.E. by an undeniably impressive roll call of collaborators, most notably no-wave hero-turned-ambient explorer Bill Laswell (who Hosono subsequently worked with on joint album Interpieces Organization), NYC DJ/producer Francois Kevorkian, and fellow Japanese ambient pioneer Yasuaki Shimizu.

With such a stellar cast list, it’s perhaps unsurprising that N.D.E. has achieved cult status over the years despite being near impossible to find outside of Hosono’s native Japan. Remarkably, it never received a full vinyl release, with only five of the set’s cuts appearing on an ultra-limited sampler. Now, Rush Hour is putting the record straight, delivering a DJ-friendly, remastered version that spreads that album’s seven tracks across two slabs of vinyl, cut at 33rpm.

N.D.E. remains an impressive, unearthly, and otherworldly album. Its unique and distinctive sound makes use of multiple nods to Eastern musical culture – think Tabla rhythms, heady violin courtesy of guest musician Arun Bagal, and transcendental synth sounds – but also throbbing techno grooves, Pete Namlook style ambient electronics, spaced-out dub rhythms, bubbly melodies reminiscent of Warp Records Artificial Intelligence-era IDM output, trippy tribal drums, and immersive electronic dream-scapes that recall the greatest exponents of Japanese new-age ambient music.

Highlights are plentiful, from the Test Department-at-dawn brilliance of Bill Laswell co-production "Edge of the End" and the sunrise-ready, dew-fresh dreaminess of "Aero" to the surging ambient techno hedonism of "Strange Attractor" – a near cult cut that remains a timeless slab of hallucinatory dancefloor excellence – and the slow-motion space-dub of Francois Kevorkian collaboration "Teaching of Sphinx," whose oddly processed sounds and low-slung bass subtly reference the Orb’s earlier remix of YMO’s "Tong Poo."

There’s also the impeccable, pleasingly experimental "Spinning Spirits" – all-addictive Indian rhythms, punishingly distorted bass, raw electronics, and paranoid aural textures – and the sparkling bliss of "Heliotherapy," a woozy chunk of sun-bright electronic hypnotism that encapsulates everything good about Hosono’s mid-90s productions.

Artist Bio

Van Dyke Parks, who first met Hosono in Los Angeles in 1972, compares his old friend to artists like Harry Nilsson and Ry Cooder, whose works are in categories all their own. “All of these nails that stuck out at that time were, to me, exemplary,” Parks said in a recent interview. “I heard that, in Japan, the tendency is to hammer down the nails that stick out. I think that Haruomi Hosono is a nail that sticks out. And has maintained that.”

Born and raised in central Tokyo as the grandson of the only Japanese survivor of the Titanic, Hosono’s young obsession with American pop culture informed his early forays into country and surf music. He made his professional debut in 1969 as a member of Apryl Fool, whose heavy psychedelia stood in contrast to his next group Happy End, whose influences leaned towards the rootsier sounds of Moby Grape and Buffalo Springfield. The group’s unique blend of West Coast sounds with Japanese lyrics would prove to be highly influential over the course of three albums. Following the release of their LA-recorded album in 1973, Hosono began his solo career with Hosono House, an intimate slice of Japanese Americana recorded in a rented house near a former American base. The back-to-basics approach was inspired in part by The Band’s Music From Big Pink, while the 16-beat rhythms reflected Hosono’s love for calypso and New Orleans music. With the “Tropical Trilogy” – Tropical Dandy (1975), Bon Voyage Co (1976) and Paraiso (1978) – Hosono turned his tropical leaning into a full-on obsession. The albums offer a glimpse into his unique global perspective, equal parts Martin Denny, Professor Longhair, Sly Stone, and Muscle Shoals, all under the lights of Yokohama’s Chinatown.

During the recording of Paraiso in 1978, Hosono played together with Ryuichi Sakamoto and Yukihiro Takahashi for the first time. By the time the album came out in April that year, the three had made plans to conquer the world as Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO). Hosono’s Cochin Moon, the synth-heavy album inspired by his trip to India, was released in September. YMO’s debut came just two months later. By 1980, the techno pop trio was the most popular group in Japan and earned the praises of such luminaries as David Bowie. They also achieved considerable success in the U.K. and the U.S., where they reached Top 20 in the R&B charts, were sampled by Afrika Bambaataa, and even made an appearance on Soul Train.

In 1982, Hosono released Philharmony, recorded almost entirely by himself and an array of synthesizers and samplers. Following YMO’s hiatus in 1984, Hosono established two labels: Non-Standard, which released electronic funk-inspired works by his group F.O.E. (Friends of Earth), including a collaboration with James Brown, and Monad, which released a series of his ambient and soundtrack works. He also kept himself busy as a producer and songwriter, contributing his studio mastery and hit songs to a countless number of emerging groups, pop idols, and veteran kayou-kyoku singers. By 1989 Hosono was regarded as an unofficial ambassador of the emerging “world music” trends and released Omni Sight Seeing, a masterwork inspired by Algerian rai and traditional Japanese minyo as much as by Duke Ellington and house music. By the 90s, he was in deep ambient and electronic territory, collaborating with the likes of Bill Laswell, Laraaji, and The Orb. His electronic projects, Sketch Show and Human Audio Sponge, followed in the 2000s, which led to the reformation of Yellow Magic Orchestra in 2008 for a global tour.

Hosono is the central thread that ties together Light in the Attic’s recently launched Japan Archival Series. A number of Hosono’s songs appear on Even A Tree Can Shed Tears: Japanese Folk & Rock 1969-1973, released in 2017, and the upcoming collections Kankyō Ongaku: Japanese Ambient, Environmental & New Age Music 1980-1990 and Pacific Breeze: Japanese City Pop, AOR & Boogie 1976-1986.

Hosono’s recent works hearken back to the early American music he obsessed over as a youth, from boogie woogie and r&b to country and folk, while also bearing his unmistakable stamp as an innovative fusionist. He continues to make new music and gain new fans around the globe as he approaches his 50th anniversary as a working musician. Fellow sound explorer and writer David Toop has said of Hosono, “Harry was a nomad, an island hopper… With intelligence and wit, as well as a love of all musics, his songs told stories about cultural misunderstandings and emerging identities, about ‘life seen through the eyes of a stranger.’”

Preview Tracklist

  • 1 Spinning Spirits
  • 2 Navigations
  • 3 Teaching Of Sphinx
  • 4 Strange Attractor
  • 5 Heliotherapy
  • 6 Higher Flyer
  • 7 Edge Of The End
  • 8 Aero