Yoshida Brothers
Superstars in their native Japan, young Tsugaru-shamisen virtuosos Ryoichiro and Kenichi Yoshida -The Yoshida Brothers- have effected nothing short of a cultural revolution with a muscular reinvention of the ancient three-stringed instrument, giving it the fiery passion of a rock n roll guitar. Online world music portal World Music Central notes, Clad in formal, ceremonial attire of kimonos and hakama pants, but sporting the dyed light brown hair that is trendy among Japans savvy youth, the Brothers play the age-old Tsugaru-shamisenan instrument akin to a rustic three-stringed banjowith the fervor of Jimi Hendrix.
Beyond the rock star status these Pacific Rim mavericks have achieved at home with their signature East-meets-West interpretation of a time-honored musical form, they are fast winning major international acclaim as well. By coaxing startlingly vivid sounds out of their timeless instruments, they have reinvigorated Tsugaru-shamisen for a new generation, incorporating elements of jazz, American folk, pop, Latin music, blues and more into their unique musical tapestry.
Following the release of their self-titled U.S. debut album in 2003, Interview Magazine wrote, The duos approachhas less to do with upholding traditions than exploring new ones. And, in a 2005 New York Times review of the Brothers performance at GlobalFest, Jon Pareles said, their set, like a shredding heavy-metal solowas all about speed and twang. They played fast unisons that would have ruthlessly revealed any mistakes; they played solos that stayed close to the tunes and built pitiless crescendos. It was music of pure sinew.
On the all-new III , their third U.S. album release on Domo Records , the charismatic duos fusion of the ancestral and the avant garde innovates further with thirteen tracks ranging from the stunningly shredding to the masterfully serene. The disc was produced by veteran American producer Tony Berg (Edie Brickell, Michael Penn, Charlie Sexton, Lisa Loeb, Nickel Creek, etc), who also plays multiple instruments, including steel string guitar and percussion, throughout. III adventurously expands on what Ryoichiro calls the Yoshida Brothers, dualistic exploration in music, both traditional and western. I believe that our world audiences will be expecting that in our future. I think incorporating western music attributes will further the popularizing of the Tsugaru Shamisen outside of Japan.
Stand-out tracks include the Yoshida Brothers reinvention of Erghen Diado (a song featured on the Bulgarian State Radio & Television Female Vocal Choirs acclaimed 1990 CD Le Mystere des Voix Bulgares), featuring a muscular new arrangement complete with drums, bass and strings--from famed world musicologist Marcel Cellier (Zamfir). A potently hypnotic and psychedelic take on Brian Enos By This River is the only song featuring vocals, fluidly delivered by former from Remy Zero frontman Cinjin Tate, whose brother Shelby mans the keyboards. Many other ace guests add to the albums complex texture, including Mitchell Froom, who co-wrote and plays keys on the robust Hit Song, and Oscar Castro Neves, whose guitar virtuosity enriches the cinematically scored and aptly titled Passion.
The Yoshida Brothers work magic completely on their own with a minimalist and beautiful version of John Lennon & Yoko Onos Oh My Love. Ryoichiro says that Berg, thought the Japanese-like melody would work with the Shamisen, while Kenichi adds, Tony selected this track with the same sensibilities he had in mind with By This River. There are no cultural references here. Either way, one can imagine the songs composers being moved by the Brothers delicate, elegant economy in interpreting it.
The roots of the Yoshida Brothers music are found in an historic, five centuries old genre first developed by in a snowy, rural region of northern Japan by itinerant street buskers, who earned spare change playing melodies and rhythms reflecting their tough lot in life. The words Tsugaru Shamisen denote both the ancient folk idiom and the primitive, banjo/lute-like instrument on which its played. The Tsugaru is the largest of the three principal types of shamisen, giving it the fullest sound. As modernity and western influences swept Japans young people over time, this spare and evocative art form fell out of favor.
Its recent hugely popular revivaland the subsequent renewal of interest in other traditional forms, including Kabuki theater and Tanka, classic Japanese verse--is due in large part to the Yoshida Brothers surge in popularity. Ryoichiro and Kenichi have been practicing the art of Tsugaru-shamisen since age 5 when, in their northern Hokkaido home, their father first fashioned them crude instruments made from wooden bowls. They went on to win top awards in many prestigious National Tsugaru-Shamisen Competitions, and their first album in Japan, 1999s Ibuki, has sold over 100,000 copies. Considering that historically, shamisen albums sell in the 5,000 units range at best, it was a truly auspicious debut.
Since then, the Yoshida Brothers have scored three more hit albums in Japan: 2000s Move, 2002s Soulful, and 2003s Frontier. In North America, Yoshida Brothers (2003) and Yoshida Brothers II (2004) have brought their mesmerizing and energetic, epically historic yet intrinsically modern and visionary sound to a new world of fans. One of their early songs, Sprouting, was recently used in the promotional campaign for the film Memoirs Of A Geisha.
With the 21st centurys unprecedented pan-cultural exchange of art and ideas, there is a global sensibility seeking transformative musical experiences, setting the stage perfectly for the Yoshida Brothers upcoming international tour and their cross-culturally pioneering album III , the making of which, says Kenichi, broadened our musical sensibilities. I have a renewed appreciation of the Shamisen when I step out of Japan, adds Ryoichiro. It is still a rather rare instrument in foreign countries and we would like to be pioneers in spreading the Shamisen sound.
Still in their early 20's, Ryoichiro and Kenichi, also known as the Yoshida Brothers , are the newest sensation in traditional Japanese World Music, achieving pin-up status with an ever-growing legion of fans. The brothers play a Tsugaru-Shamisen, a three-stringed instrument resembling the banjo and with a style originating from northern Japan with intricate and fast picking.
With the exception of their instruments, they are anything but traditional. With spiked, dyed brown hair and animated performances thrashing their instruments like rock guitarists, many have stated that they are a significant force in a new music revolution. "Every day we challenge the possibilities", says Kenichi, "we creat our own story... by improvisation".
Comments
"The Yoshida Brothers have changed the image of the music. They're changing the perception of what these players dress like, how they handle themselves onstage. They're more like pop musicians. They look at the shamisen in a different way, but they're very aware of the tradition it comes out of. They're absolutely top-notch players."
- Ethnomusicologist Michael Peluse
"The [Yoshida Brothers] approach has less to do with upholding traditions than exploring new ones."
- Interview Magazine
"Buoyed by the success of their new album and recent US tour, the Yoshida Brothers are hoping to take their traditional instruments to a higher plane."
- J Select
"When I first saw the Yoshida Brothers play a show in Santa Monica I was blown away, knocked out. Not just by their virtuosity, but by their wholehearted commitment to the world that their music seems to evoke."
- Producer Tony Berg
"The brothers embrace tradition, playing standards from the shamisen repertoire. But they also expand on it. In their own compositions, they riff on themes from the old songs, incorporating other instruments and elements from jazz, classical, flamenco, rock, the blues even techno. The music is high energy, and it is highly improvisational."
- The Boston Globe
"The Japanese-Banjo players establish a sensational new music style."
- Rafu Shimpo
"In the world of global music, it is hard to make a bigger splash than the arrival of the Yoshida Brothers, a Jaoanese musical duo that has taken their own country, and now the world, by storm. The duo also provides an example of how music, though it can bend, does not break with tradition. The history and tradition that echoes through their sound proves that even the most global music is rooted in local soil"
- The Globalist
"Their set, like a shredding heavy-meal solo- was all about speed and twang. They played fast unisons that would have ruthlessly revealed any mistakes; they played solos that stayed close to the tunes and built pitiless crescendos. It was music of pure sinew."
- Jon Parales, New York Times
Discography
Yoshida Brothers