Beginning with the lovely overdubbed E-Bow drones and feedback swirls of
"And Begun," at once
psychedelic and somehow sweetly
bluesy as well,
Japancakes adds to the noted
Bliss Out series on
Darla with a fine six-song effort in
Belmondo. The sextet conjures up six tunes for this release, each strikingly lovely instrumentals exploring a gentle, quietly intoxicating zone somewhere between
exotica revivalism,
shoegazer ambience, and low-key
mood music.
"Handguns and Firearms," for all its violent title, is anything but; taking up a full third of the disc at 16 minutes, it's a perfect study in wistful, minimal style. Suggesting nothing so much as
Slowdive's underrated
Pygmalion as remixed by
the High Llamas, the combination of piano, vibraphone, strings, low-key drumming, and electric guitars and bass is flat-out lovely, revolving around a central melody loop for its steady flow before dissolving into a final swirl of drones. It's a hard moment to top, but the rest of the disc is an equally worthy listen, exploring music that's hardly kick up your feet giddiness, but in its truly beautiful way suggests an interesting alternative to the likes of
Godspeed You Black Emperor! and
Sigur Ros, more down-home and calm.
"Always Stuck With Leaving," which definitely suggests another connection to the music of
Neil Halstead and
Rachel Goswell (though this time more the
country shades of
Mojave 3 than
Slowdive's shadowy power), is a fine moment, while
"Duluth 75" adds some unexpected (if still low-key) energy to make for a distinctly different offering on the otherwise slow-paced performances. Perhaps the most mournful song is
"Theme for a Film," which uses everything from slide guitar twang to slow, steadily descending strings to create an appropriately cinematic mood, if a particularly downbeat one. ~ Ned Raggett