MP3 SAMPLES
Gang Girls at 5:39pm.mp3 7.1mgb
by Pain Jerk
Wonderwall.mp3 2.5mgb
by Masonna



Click for ordering info!!!


VARIOUS ARTISTS
Japanoise
LM022 CD
Approximately 48 minutes
Edition of 1000
$10.00ppd USA/$12.00ppd world

Track listing:
01. PAIN JERK - Gang Girls At 5:39PM
02. K2 - Back To Back Appearance
03. C.C.C.C. - Worm Wood
04. Melt-Banana - Brick Again
05. KK Null - Star Burst
06. MSBR - Yakuza Psychedelia
07. Masonna - Wonderwall
08. Incapacitants - Head Butt To The Railroad
09. Mo-Te - 0.9MG
10. Government Alpha - Fall Apart

Some of the most riveting hypnotic noise ever heard from these Japanese artists. I assure you, your collection is not complete without these tracks.

Website: click on names in track listing

Reviews:
These are some great names in the noize scene, and this can't help but turn out to be a pretty good listen. Fun stuff, all with its own unique fingerprint in the waves of sound. Includes all of the contact info. A great starter kit for the uninitiated noise curious. Includes harsh noise, white noise, frequency dialing, distortion, feedback, oscillations, vocal warping, electronics/electro/synth beats, and the blips and bleeps of technology's trademark. I'm fond of the Melt Banana and the Masonna, but you choose for yourself. - Neo-Zine.com

It's been a while since I ran across a status check on the state of noise works in Japan, so it was nice to get this one in the mail. From the middle of the U.S., Little Mafia Records herein give us a rundown from some of Japan's best-known purveyors of unforgiving audio experimentation.

Stand back, clear your mind, and ready yourself for distortion, white noise, electronics, metallic smashing, and the occasional moments of actual beauty shining through the chaos. While making noise may be "easy," making noise that actually communicates something is an altogether different deal. Therein lies the difference between art and, well, rubbish. This album thankfully is pretty much the real thing, as you might expect from names like K.K. Null, MSBR, Masonna, and Incapacitants.

Pain Jerk kicks the album off with rhythmic thumping, metallic crashings, and grindings. It's all electronics, no synth, but it sounds more like a kitchen dishpan disaster. The piece later turns into white-noise whooshes and walls of noise static. K2 follows, as always using metal junk effected and recorded onto a multi-track, then mixed down using sudden movements and abrupt shifts between sounds. Though the sound source is metal junk, this actually ends up sounding less like metallic sounds then the Pain Jerk electronics did! The joys of noise.

C.C.C.C.'s piece has the thick sound they always manage to deliver, like being inside a jet engine while it's running. A surprising inclusion here is Melt-Banana, not generally considered a noise group. This piece, though, is rather like a weird "noise remix" of one of their songs, with extra-added editing and sound effects.

Using his "nullsonic", often just a patch cord played through an array of effects, K.K. Null serves up a collection of shimmering, throbbing sounds, like crystalline shards of electronic humming. Some parts end up sounding a bit like shortwave interference. I was surprised to find MSBR's piece actually rather tame compared to many of the other tracks here, though that's not a bad thing. He'll usually deliver the harsher side of noise, but here he slowly percolates, like rumbles and fuzzes stirred slowly in a pot.

Masonna's track, though, is another dose of intense screaming cathartic noise, repeating loops of static, shouts and yelling through filters and distortion and who knows what...if a little baby threw a tantrum with a fuzzbox, maybe this is what you'd get. Never a disappointment, the Incapacitants are a relatively underappreciated quantity in the noise scene despite being one of the longest-running projects in Japan. Vocals echoing out to space, distorted rumbles and creaky static-laden trains cascade through the headphones. Look out.

It's always tempting to look at a compilation as a state of the union address from a particular genre, or location, or otherwise-delineated category, and the title of this release almost encourages it. But most often it's not that easy; and without names like Merzbow, Hijokaidan, Astro, Guilty Connector, and so many more, this compilation couldn't claim to cover the whole of the Japanese noise territory. But as a snapshot of a number of expert contributors, it's a fine sample to enjoy. And as an introduction for newcomers, it would make a great start. - Mason Jones, DustedMagazine.com

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