Takashi Kokubo & Andrea Esperti
Music For A Cosmic Garden
Japanese ambient/environmental music icon Takashi Kokubo teams up with Italian/Swiss trombone player Andrea Esperti on this cosmic-fourth world soundscape.
If you're not sick of kankyō ongaku yet, this new collision of placid Japanese atmospheres and muted jazz at least teases a drop more blood from the stone. Takashi Kokubo was featured on Light in the Attic's now canonical compilation, and still tracks around the world recording environmental sounds with his binaural "CyberPhonic" microphone.
He's released over 20 albums at this stage, and it's his dreamy ambient textures that form the foundations of "Music for a Cosmic Garden". Esperti's muted whines give the tracks a slightly different resonance, offering a lounge jazz flavor that's unexpected and pleasingly smokey. And while there's nothing really new on offer here, it's a pleasant diversion
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Japanese ambient/environmental music icon Takashi Kokubo teams up with Italian/Swiss trombone player Andrea Esperti on this cosmic-fourth world soundscape.
If you're not sick of kankyō ongaku yet, this new collision of placid Japanese atmospheres and muted jazz at least teases a drop more blood from the stone. Takashi Kokubo was featured on Light in the Attic's now canonical compilation, and still tracks around the world recording environmental sounds with his binaural "CyberPhonic" microphone.
He's released over 20 albums at this stage, and it's his dreamy ambient textures that form the foundations of "Music for a Cosmic Garden". Esperti's muted whines give the tracks a slightly different resonance, offering a lounge jazz flavor that's unexpected and pleasingly smokey. And while there's nothing really new on offer here, it's a pleasant diversion
Japanese ambient/environmental music icon Takashi Kokubo teams up with Italian/Swiss trombone player Andrea Esperti on this cosmic-fourth world soundscape.
If you're not sick of kankyō ongaku yet, this new collision of placid Japanese atmospheres and muted jazz at least teases a drop more blood from the stone. Takashi Kokubo was featured on Light in the Attic's now canonical compilation, and still tracks around the world recording environmental sounds with his binaural "CyberPhonic" microphone.
He's released over 20 albums at this stage, and it's his dreamy ambient textures that form the foundations of "Music for a Cosmic Garden". Esperti's muted whines give the tracks a slightly different resonance, offering a lounge jazz flavor that's unexpected and pleasingly smokey. And while there's nothing really new on offer here, it's a pleasant diversion
Japanese ambient/environmental music icon Takashi Kokubo teams up with Italian/Swiss trombone player Andrea Esperti on this cosmic-fourth world soundscape.
If you're not sick of kankyō ongaku yet, this new collision of placid Japanese atmospheres and muted jazz at least teases a drop more blood from the stone. Takashi Kokubo was featured on Light in the Attic's now canonical compilation, and still tracks around the world recording environmental sounds with his binaural "CyberPhonic" microphone.
He's released over 20 albums at this stage, and it's his dreamy ambient textures that form the foundations of "Music for a Cosmic Garden". Esperti's muted whines give the tracks a slightly different resonance, offering a lounge jazz flavor that's unexpected and pleasingly smokey. And while there's nothing really new on offer here, it's a pleasant diversion
Double LP with 350gsm sleeve.
Estimated Release Date: 07 April 2023
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
Japanese ambient/environmental music icon Takashi Kokubo teams up with Italian/Swiss trombone player Andrea Esperti on this cosmic-fourth world soundscape.
If you're not sick of kankyō ongaku yet, this new collision of placid Japanese atmospheres and muted jazz at least teases a drop more blood from the stone. Takashi Kokubo was featured on Light in the Attic's now canonical compilation, and still tracks around the world recording environmental sounds with his binaural "CyberPhonic" microphone.
He's released over 20 albums at this stage, and it's his dreamy ambient textures that form the foundations of "Music for a Cosmic Garden". Esperti's muted whines give the tracks a slightly different resonance, offering a lounge jazz flavor that's unexpected and pleasingly smokey. And while there's nothing really new on offer here, it's a pleasant diversion
Digipack CD.
Estimated Release Date: 07 April 2023
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
Japanese ambient/environmental music icon Takashi Kokubo teams up with Italian/Swiss trombone player Andrea Esperti on this cosmic-fourth world soundscape.
If you're not sick of kankyō ongaku yet, this new collision of placid Japanese atmospheres and muted jazz at least teases a drop more blood from the stone. Takashi Kokubo was featured on Light in the Attic's now canonical compilation, and still tracks around the world recording environmental sounds with his binaural "CyberPhonic" microphone.
He's released over 20 albums at this stage, and it's his dreamy ambient textures that form the foundations of "Music for a Cosmic Garden". Esperti's muted whines give the tracks a slightly different resonance, offering a lounge jazz flavor that's unexpected and pleasingly smokey. And while there's nothing really new on offer here, it's a pleasant diversion