Open today: 12:00 - 18:00

By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.

Wrong
WrongWrongWrongWrong

Labels

Virgin

Catno

VSTXDJ1589

Formats

1x Vinyl 12" 33 ⅓ RPM Promo

Country

UK

Release date

Jan 1, 1996

V i b e s

V i b e s

Media: VG+i
Sleeve: VG+

55kr*

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

A

Wrong (Mood II Swing Dub)

8:52

B

Wrong (Deep Dish Remix 2)

11:50

Other items you may like:

Immersive pop. And it´s amazing!
Limited of edition of 40 copies. A recording of Anders Lauge Meldgaard (literally) underground organ, that played in the fields of Himmerlands soil.
Shimizu exploring the intersections of fusion, synthpop, new wave, and jazz. Good stuff._________________________PressAcclaimed saxophonist, producer and composer Yasuaki Shimizu will release Kiren, his unreleased album from 1984, on the Palto Flats record label on February 25, 2022. Liner notes by music historian Chee Shimizu, and credits in both Japanese and English.By the early 1980s Yasuaki Shimizu had established himself on the Japanese new wave scene, producing many important experimental pop records and releasing several albums as the bandleader of Mariah. Following the release of his widely regarded solo classic Kakashi, from 1982, and the otherworldly Utakata No Hibi, by Mariah in 1983, he went into the studio the following year with frequent collaborators, producer Aki Ikuta and Morio Watanabe (bassist of Mariah), to record a mystifying collection of experimental dance music. Utilizing cutting-edge technology and studio trickery, Kiren showcases Shimizu's trademark playfulness, marrying richly layered production techniques to off-kilter, sometimes traditional sounding rhythms and melodies. Portending his work with the Saxophonettes as well as forecasting trends in techno, new wave, and futuristic rhythmic music, this formerly lost album represents an important period of Shimizu's artistic expression, an artist at his peak, while successfully exploring the intersections of fusion, synthpop, new wave, and jazz.As Chee Shimizu (no relation) writes in the liner notes, Kiren, and his concurrent release Latin were “born out of a free environment of collaboration that existed between Yasuaki and Aki Ikuta ... (exemplifying) his most energetic works.” In listening to Kiren, we might share with Yasuaki Shimizu the joy and excitement of experimentalism and movement that went into the making of this album, now released for the first time many years later.
One emotion in five forms
Field recordings, acid and lo-fi electro in a great mix