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				| DISK Session #20: MASAYOSHI FUJITA & JAN JELINEK | 
			 
			
				| // Presentation & Sound performance
// Date: 06. August 2010, 20h
// Venue: General Public, Schoenhauser Allee 167c, 10435 Berlin
 
DISK Session #20 presents Faitiche – a mixture of music label  and art edition operated by Jan Jelinek – to celebrate the latest  release Bird, Lake, Objects with a sound performance by Masayoshi  Fujita & Jan Jelinek, surrounded by original graphic works of  Masayoshi Fujita.
 
Queried on his favourite word in the German  language, Masayoshi Fujita will pick ‘getragen’ – without a  sliver of hesitation. Further questioning will reveal that he loves the  term’s semantic signifiers, its inherent sense of “expansive, deep,  quiet and sombre.” And yet, ‘getragen’ leaves plenty of room for  interpretation: depending on context, it might also indicate wearing  apparel or the state of being carried – two more mundane interpretations  that I would rather keep from him.
 
Does Masayoshi’s own definition, however, apply to  ‘Bird, Lake, Objects’? Only to a limited extent. Compared to previous  Faitiche releases, ‘Bird, Lake, Objects’ is certainly the most ‘getragen’  of them all. Nevertheless, this is by far not the first association  that comes to mind. From a distance, these tracks seem rather  introspective, cautious even – and reflect the recording situation:  deliberately pared down, reduced to a single microphone in space and a  separate track for all other instruments, each movement and action is  chronicled by the treacherous mike. This confronted me with some  unexpected and unfamiliar problems. For example, we had to swap out the  seating in the studio as my favoured chair had a characteristic creak.  Other, external influences were proved our control: fire engine klaxons,  street noise and footfall became part of the recordings and their  improvisatory nature. Each movement required careful orchestration,  fully aware of its irrevocable nature. Space itself was always present  and an audible entity, except on ‘Stripped to RM’ (recorded without a  microphone or vibraphone track). After extensive deliberations, we  decided to forgo the vibes on this piece – a very similar version had  already been released in 2008 (on the compilation ‘Enjoy The Silence’,  Mule Electronic, 2008).
 
On Masayoshi Fujita:
Masayoshi Fujita’s route to Berlin was a  roundabout one. Introduced to music via Bon Jovi, his first stint abroad  naturally took him to the motherland of rock, the United States. After a  year in the USA, he returned to Japan to study film. His love for movie  making, however, proved less pronounced than his admiration for Bon  Jovi, a band he can still quote and sing from memory. He decided to  learn how to play the drums, followed by extensive vibraphone training  to craft and play his own, mostly jazz and electronic-influenced  compositions. Determined not to stick to traditional vibraphone styles  or techniques, Masayoshi started to prepare his instrument with pieces  of metal, strips of foil and similar objects. The resulting new sounds,  akin to distortions, help to expand the vibraphone spectrum without  eroding the instrument’s intrinsic character or even abandoning it  altogether. Besides his extremely reduced and deliberate style of  playing, it is this aural redefinition that makes Masayoshi Fujita’s  craft so remarkable and noteworthy in my eyes. Literally caught in his  spell, it was a delight and privilege to accompany his play.
 
On a different note, Masayoshi’s woodcuts should  not go unmentioned. The cover and booklet of ‘Bird, Lake, Objects’  present concise, abstract and monochrome landscapes and thus a visual  complement to his music.
(Jan Jelinek)
 
More info:
> www.faitiche.de
> www.generalpublic.de
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				> August 06, 2010
  
					 
			 
			
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