year/2019
country/UK
label/ALBERT’S FAVOURITES (ALBFLP05)
MARK DE CLIVE-LOWEの呼びかけで、ジャズを中心に日本の精鋭プレイヤーが集結した ニュー・バンドRONIN ARKESTRA(浪人アーケストラ)。
WONK、CRO-MAGNON、 KYOTO JAZZ SEXTET等のメンバーが参加した、デビュー・アルバム完成。
マーク・ド・クライヴ・ロウが『Heritage』に続いて、自身のルーツである「日本」にフォーカスしたプロジェクトが、浪人アーケストラ。LAから東京へと場所を移し、日本人のプレイヤーたちと作り上げたアルバムは、日本のジャズの歴史に新しいページを刻む作品となりました。
浪人アーケストラ・メンバー:
MARK DE CLIVE-LOWE,
荒田洸(WONK),
コスガツヨシ(CRO-MAGNON),
藤井伸昭(Sleep Walker), 類家心平(RS5pb), 安藤康平(MELRAW), 小林眞樹(The Bang Attack),
Sauce81
A1Lullabies of The Lost
A2Onkochishin
A3Elegy of Entrapment
A4Art of Altercation
B1Cosmic Collisions
B2Circle of Transmigration
B3Fallen Angel
B4Tempestuous Temperaments
"A journeying expression of densely rich jazz sonics combined with electronic textural modification" Stamp The Wax
“The Tokyo collective boast players at the forefront of Japan’s jazz and electronic music scenes” Bandcamp Daily
Led by producer, composer, and multi-instrumentalist Mark de Clive Lowe, Tokyo’s Rōnin Arkestra brings together some of the most supreme and innovative players in Japan’s Jazz and electronic scene, featuring members of Kyoto Jazz Sextet, WONK, Cro-Magnon, Root Soul, Sleepwalker, Sauce81 and Kyoto Jazz Massive.
Formed in 2017, the collective’s debut album ‘Sonkei’, released 27th September via Albert’s Favourites, fuses ’60s deep and spiritual jazz with experimental electronica. The album follows the release of their critically acclaimed debut EP ‘First Meeting’, released earlier this year.
The super-group takes their name from Rōnin, the masterless samurai of a time gone by. Deadly master swordsmen who, without lords to serve, roamed Japan offering their skills wherever needed. As the need for their swordsmanship declined, they became master artisans making textiles, crafting poetry, painting and writing books.
It’s a fascinating evolution that has a parallel to each member in the Rōnin Arkestra collective - master musicians from different bands and clans coming together to create a vagabond band of like-minded musicians - weaving the stories of their lives into a collective sound. “The members of Rōnin Arkestra are some of my favorite musicians anywhere and the way we all come together in battle formation with so much heart and soul is making magic,” says de Clive Lowe.
The musical ‘stories’ contained in ‘Sonkei’ are each named after episodes from Samurai Champloo, an Edo-era, Japanese anime series following two ronin and their charge in search of the elusive "samurai who smells of sunflower”. “It’s a favourite of mine, with its two main characters being such juxtaposed personalities, but their only way to succeed is to work together - the lessons and reflection in that alone is self-evident,” adds de Clive Lowe.
Compositions such as ‘Lullabies of the Lost’ are a deep meditation that transports us simultaneously back hundreds of years into the right here and now, while the horn-heavy, fusion-driven ‘Art of Altercation’, confronts the skill of conflict and confrontation.
Elsewhere, the impulsive and free-flowing ‘Cosmic Collisions’ merges raw grooves and electronics – an interstellar configuration of stars, light years from each other, while ‘Circle of Transmigration’ challenges the never ending circle of life, fusing soaring horns and piano-driven melodies.
Rōnin Arkestra started life with de Clive Lowe wanting to create a project with some of his favourite Japanese musicians, unaware of the sound, shape or vibe it would manifest. Reaching out to his musician friends including Sauce81, they began recording at Red Bull Studio in Tokyo and the chemistry was instant, creating an impulsive sound that blended spiritual jazz and beat sensibilities heavy on the improvisation.
“That’s the beauty of this collective - everyone is so great at what they do, playing to the music rather than their own egos and so open to the moment. That’s the heart of the ‘jazz’ in Ronin Arkestra - being wide open to the moment and letting the music happen as it wants to. In every way there’s so much respect and reverence for the music, and for each other - which is no coincidence given how much Japan is built on an ingrained culture of respect. There’s a beautiful word for this in Japanese: sonkei,” says de Clive-Lowe.