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Konoma Bandcamp Discogs
Takuro Okada genre: Jazz
release date Nov. 21, 2025
For years, Takuro Okada has carried a quiet question: how can a Japanese musician honor the music of African Americans without simply borrowing it? That search shapes his new album Konoma, a work guided by the idea of “Afro Mingei.” The Tokyo guitarist, producer, and bandleader has lived inside this tension since childhood, drawn to blues, jazz, and funk records that nourished him, yet hesitant in the face of the histories they hold. The concept of Afro Mingei, which Okada first encountered in an exhibition by artist Theaster Gates, gave him a way forward. Gates connected Black aesthetics with Japanese folk craft, both rooted in resistance — “Black is Beautiful” defying racism, the Mingei movement preserving everyday beauty against industrial erasure. That kinship became the compass for Konoma, a record attuned to echoes across cultures and time.



Konoma holds six originals and two covers, all shaped by this dialogue. The elegantly unhurried “Portrait of Yanagi” drifts like a standard half-remembered from another era, while the brief but potent “Galaxy” gestures toward Sun Ra’s late 1970s electric organ experiments, the fractured propulsion of Flying Lotus’s early beat tapes, and the shadowy atmospheres of trip-hop. Okada’s choice of covers sharpens the conversation: Jan Garbarek’s “Nefertite” shimmers with the cool austerity of 1970s ECM, reframing Europe’s own search for identity inside jazz, while Hiromasa Suzuki’s “Love” channels the electric vibrancy of 1970s Japanese fusion, when musicians fused psychedelia, funk, and folk into a distinctly local dialect. Together, they anchor Konoma in a lineage of artists who bent borrowed forms toward something new.



Okada’s life has been shaped by such crossings. He grew up in Fussa, where the Yokota U.S. Air Force base loomed large, learning guitar in rowdy clubs for American servicemen while teaching himself recording at home. That hybrid education led to collaborations with Haruomi Hosono, Nels Cline, Sam Gendel, James Blackshaw, and Carlos Niño, and to a body of work spanning film soundtracks, collaborative projects, and exploratory solo albums. Earlier this year, Temporal Drift released The Near End, The Dark Night, The County Line, which features selections from Okada’s expansive archive of recorded material, cementing his reputation as one of Japan’s most adventurous contemporary musicians. With Konoma, co-released by ISC Hi-Fi Selects and Temporal Drift, Okada delivers his most personal and expansive statement yet: a meditation on connection, influence, and the beauty that survives across cultures.



- Words by Randall Roberts
bucolic systems Bandcamp
Technomarina
release date Sept. 5, 2025
bucolic systems is a love letter to the Frutiger Aero aesthetic, which was widely used in game and tech products from roughly 2004 to 2013. The goal of this album was to sonically capture the spirit of the aesthetic, often blending electronic and acoustic instrumentation. Particular influences on the album's sound direction include the sounds of Windows Vista, Nokia's mellow electronic ringtones, the Wii U's system music, and the soundtrack of opoona.



Included with this album is two bonus tracks, a digital booklet and six nature images taken by Yazan A.!



Google Drive download: (also includes a subfolder for transition-free versions of 8 tracks)
Cantoma (Deluxe) NeoDB Spotify
Cantoma
release date Feb. 24, 2005 publisher: (C) 2005 Music For Dreams
March 16, 2023 listened
还是完全不需要经过刻意情绪修饰的这样的chillout/lounge音乐是能纯粹让人感到舒心的东西....
Chillout Downtempo Lounge