Hirohito Ihara, who founded radicalfashion in Kobe, Japan, speaks of the subconscious influence of his surroundings on his work. He links the sea with his “liking for some kind of nostalgia”. He confesses that he doesn’t know with certainty how a life in Kobe, on the sea, and this nostalgia are connected but that “...no one can escape the subconscious influence of their surroundings and my liking for some kind of nostalgia seems to me to have something to do with that.” In the purest spirit of abstract expression, Hirohito allows the listeners to experience in his debut full-length, Odori, their own emotions without any guiding elements. Of his piano work, he says, “I have come to like gentle notes created by striking piano keys softly, rather than clear-cut, strong key touches.” Again, he avoids the “clear-cut”. He confesses to a regional influence on his music but consciously tempers it. “I don’t think my music should have too much localness because I want many people around the world to like my music,” he says. Hirohito began playing piano at a young age. As his play matured he “became conscious of the beauty of sounds as a melody.” This awareness was illustrated for him by M. Ravel’s “Piano Concerto in G”(1929-1931). “Its beauty deeply impressed me,” he comments. Its interesting to note that Ravel is considered one of the great French musical Impressionists. That movement was noted for it’s focus on mood and atmosphere and its use of dissonance and the whole tone scale to create hazy, dreamy, effects. Odori, in radicalfashion's twenty-first century language, moves as boldly and coherently apart from the mainstream as Ravel’s “Piano Concerto in G” did in its time. The richly textured and strikingly original Odori is a composite of contrasting elements. In all senses it is new, fresh, and distinctive yet it sounds familiar. It’s a fascinating sound-world where elegant, sophisticated piano compositions and highbrow experimentalism with uncommon scales collide with playful, modern electronics. It’s a lethargic sonata, free but structured, composed but improvisational. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Ballet
Shousetsu
Suna
Opening
Toh-Koh
Photo Dynasmo
Shunpoudoh
Mask
Thousand (featuring Carl Stone)
Usunibi (featuring Carl Stone)
Thousand (f/ Carl Stone)
Usunibi (f/ Carl Stone)
Thousand (feat.Carl Stone)
Usunibi (feat. Carl Stone)
Thousand
Usunibi
Happy End
Bone China
Prologue
A Ribbon Knot
Thousand (featuring Carl Stone
Sequence For Tsuguharu Fujita
Miuccia Lyric
Pointillism
Egyptology
Drum
In Women
Way Home
Thousand (feat. Carl Stone)
Order
To "The September 13th"
Thousand (feat Carl Stone)
Usunibi (feat Carl Stone)
24
Thousand (ft. Carl Stone)
Usunibi (ft. Carl Stone)
Born China
heart pods
To “The September 13th”
BalletDansxRemix
Usunibi ft. Carl Stone
Thousand ft. Carl Stone
Sequence for Tsuguhara Fujita
Lit my fire
Surrey
Ballet (Dansx Remix)
To »The September 13th«
Thousand [feat. Carl Stone]
Radicalfashion - Ballet (Dansx Remix)
Usunibi feat. Carl Stone
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