It's time to offer up a hearty "welcome back!" to Japanese avant-prog quartet
Happy Family. Listeners last heard from them on 1997's sophomore outing
Toscco, and the band broke up the following year, re-emerging 14 years later in 2012 with three members of the
Toscco lineup -- keyboardist
Kenichi Morimoto, guitarist
Takahiro Izutani, and drummer
Keiichi Nagase -- joined by new bassist
Hidemi Ichikawa.
Morimoto,
Izutani,
Nagase, and
Ichikawa hardly skip a beat between then and now as they extend the
Rock in Opposition-influenced
Happy Family sound into the 21st century on the group's third
Cuneiform label release, 2014's
Minimal Gods, a set of ultra-tight high-energy complex instrumentals complete with rippling keyboards, metal-crunchy guitar, gut-punching drums, and speaker-challenging deep
Magma-esque bass. Literally speaking, however,
Happy Family's complicated time signatures skip plenty of beats, beginning with the demented rhythms -- partly in 11/8 -- of opener "Slide," with
Nagase and
Ichikawa locking tightly together,
Izutani Frippishly riffing and then throwing out choppy chords for
Morimoto to toss back in counterpoint, and everything fitting together like crazily angled puzzle pieces. Amidst all this,
Izutani still manages to nail a pair of brief but fiery solos to the skewed structure surrounding him. With its retro-squelchy keyboard tones and memorably catchy riff/melody, second tune "No Talent, No Smell" suggests a twisted but high-spirited form of proggy alien space funk, while
Izutani's jabs of metal guitar, exploding over
Morimoto's
Present-like arpeggiated keys, bring a headbanging intensity to "Rodrigo." Headbanging in an irregular tempo, of course.
The album's first three tracks were penned by
Izutani, and the momentum doesn't flag in the following pair of
Morimoto compositions: "Portal Site for Sightseeing" finds
Happy Family jamming out in 17/8 with unfolding chords, melodies, and solo interludes that take the music higher and higher before an abrupt finish; stretching past seven minutes in length, "Doggy-Human Contest" is densely packed with changeups to start but by its midsection has tumbled into a sort of trudging space-metal-blues over which
Morimoto cranks out a synth solo suggesting the likes of
Joe Zawinul,
Sun Ra, and
Ray Manzarek in equal measure. With its five-and-a-half-minute buildup to another slam-bang finish,
Izutani's "Animal Spirit," in a relatively straightforward 7/8, is a strong companion piece to
Morimoto's aforementioned "Portal Site," with a terrific solo from the guitarist over one of the album's most engaging grooves. After the band flirts with fusion on "Cat Riding on Roomba,"
Morimoto's "Celestial Illegal Construction" layers precise keys and guitars around and through its heart of typically off-center metal and space rock before the tune's incongruously stumbling -- even drunken -- coda, with
Izutani and
Morimoto still managing to end on a unison note.
Izutani's concluding mini-epic "Feu de Joie" throws elements of
Univers Zero,
Pink Floyd, and even
Tipographica-styled
Zappa-isms into its sometimes cavernous mix, demonstrating that
Minimal Gods still holds surprises even during its final moments. Now that
Happy Family are back, here's hoping they plan to stick around. ~ Dave Lynch