Product Description
Ryo Takematsu [ Six-O-Seven Blues ] Triple 7" set [EM1117TEP]
Selling Price: US$18.00
Weight: 255g
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Product Description
CD version: Maxi CD case (7mm spine)
Vinyl version: Special slipcase (10mm spine). Quality cutting/pressing at 45 RPM every side.
"If there exists something called Young Weird Tokyo, Ryo Takematsu is living at the heart of it." (Clive Bell, The Wire)
Tokyo's Ryo Takematsu proves the universality and timelessness of the blues on his debut solo release Six-O-Seven Blues. Recorded mainly in a Japanese bedroom, Takematsu's heartfelt and sincere acoustic guitar playing filters his love of pre-war American country blues through the more relatively recent influences of John Fahey and Backwards Sam Firk; the seven pieces here, on three 7" records, slingshot these influences through space and time, from America in a previous century to 21st-century Japan and on to the wider world. Bookended by opening and closing collaborative tracks, Takematsu, one of the founding members of EM Records stalwarts Noahlewis' Mahlon Taits, rides solo for the bulk of the tracks, sounding relaxed and focused. The opening title track, by Takematsu, features some guest percussion from his bandmates, and the final track is a remix, by Tomoki Kanda, of John Fahey's "On Doing An Evil Deed Blues". Two more tracks by Fahey appear, plus songs by Skip James and William Moore. Released on CD and 7" vinyl, in a three-disc set, this time-travelling set is a charm.
Cover art by moOog yamamOTO (Buffalo Daughter)
TRACKS:
1. Six-O-Seven Blues (Ryo Takematsu) 6:07
2. Old Country Rock (Willam Moore) 3:33
3. In Christ There Is No East Or West (John Fahey) 3:29
4. I'm So Glad (Skip James) 2:17
5. On Doing An Evil Deed Blues (John Fahey) 5:10
6. Requiem For John Hurt (John Fahey) 5:50
7. On Doing An Evil Deed Blues - Tomoki Kanda Re-Edit *5:40
Vinyl version: Special slipcase (10mm spine). Quality cutting/pressing at 45 RPM every side.
"If there exists something called Young Weird Tokyo, Ryo Takematsu is living at the heart of it." (Clive Bell, The Wire)
Tokyo's Ryo Takematsu proves the universality and timelessness of the blues on his debut solo release Six-O-Seven Blues. Recorded mainly in a Japanese bedroom, Takematsu's heartfelt and sincere acoustic guitar playing filters his love of pre-war American country blues through the more relatively recent influences of John Fahey and Backwards Sam Firk; the seven pieces here, on three 7" records, slingshot these influences through space and time, from America in a previous century to 21st-century Japan and on to the wider world. Bookended by opening and closing collaborative tracks, Takematsu, one of the founding members of EM Records stalwarts Noahlewis' Mahlon Taits, rides solo for the bulk of the tracks, sounding relaxed and focused. The opening title track, by Takematsu, features some guest percussion from his bandmates, and the final track is a remix, by Tomoki Kanda, of John Fahey's "On Doing An Evil Deed Blues". Two more tracks by Fahey appear, plus songs by Skip James and William Moore. Released on CD and 7" vinyl, in a three-disc set, this time-travelling set is a charm.
Cover art by moOog yamamOTO (Buffalo Daughter)
TRACKS:
1. Six-O-Seven Blues (Ryo Takematsu) 6:07
2. Old Country Rock (Willam Moore) 3:33
3. In Christ There Is No East Or West (John Fahey) 3:29
4. I'm So Glad (Skip James) 2:17
5. On Doing An Evil Deed Blues (John Fahey) 5:10
6. Requiem For John Hurt (John Fahey) 5:50
7. On Doing An Evil Deed Blues - Tomoki Kanda Re-Edit *5:40