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Associated Artists Hirama, H ZETT M, PE'Z, appa, Petrolz, etc. |
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2011.05.16, 07:37 AM | #1 | ||||||||||||
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Chieko Kinbara (strings)
This thread is about 金原千恵子 (Chieko Kinbara), who is responsible for the strings in Akane sasu, Tadashii Machi, Kyogenshou, among others.
Japanese wiki page Her own music is quite interesting. It's based on club jazz (think DJ Kawasaki, Kyoto Jazz Massive) with elements of rock guitar and her signature violins of course.
^ Pretty generic club jazz, but enjoyable nonetheless.
^ This one is a little more deep house. And this one is a little crazy on the rock guitars
And another, more contemplative
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2011.05.16, 01:37 PM | #2 | ||||
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Obviously a very cool lady. That first track is really good stuff, key change for the chorus which is a nice touch, and I'm taking notes on stuff like that for when I get around for making the soulful house track I bought Reason for one day and never got around to making...
She has Strings of Life is a cover of a very famous house (Detroit techno) track by Derrick May as Rhythim is Rhythim. Yes it sounds very late 80s, but it's a fun bit of music history nevertheless.
In SR land, it's good to see someone whose contribution doesn't overtly draw attention to itself getting some praise, and she is billed as a guest musician rather than just a session musician. I remember someone posting that Kyougenshou was underrated because like the other Track 1s there was some kind of propelling urgency or desparation about all of them, and in that song's case there's an interestingly dissonant string arrangement that lends a lot of that desperation and is very much part of the hypermodern metropolitan feel of the song. And now I'm listening to it, who invents solos like Susumu Nishikawa... He's a hero.
Last edited by so_cold : 2011.05.21 at 03:46 PM. Reason: just realised I've actually used the word "hypermodern". and that makes me sound like a media studies lecturer. whatever |
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2011.05.16, 07:59 PM | #3 |
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Yeah you're right. Chieko Kinbara is definitely more soulful house than club jazz... I just didn't think of that term at the point of writing.
I'd say anything with a very obvious 4/4 beat, I'd classify it under soulful house. Anyway, I don't know why SR would choose Saito Neko over her. Perhaps she's way too restrained and is not into orchestral stuff.
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2011.05.17, 09:03 AM | #4 | |
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I like the minimalist approach in SR's music. Definitely prefer just Kinbara and her group over the full-on Saito orchestra. Hell, just over Neko period.
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2011.05.17, 09:49 AM | #5 |
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Probably because it's an uphill battle for an orchestra to be involved with anything genre-defying. The more orchestral recordings that Shiina Ringo makes beyond KSK, the less consistently she defies genres (it happens, but it's increasingly rare).
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