Noahlewis' Mahlon Taits
Noahlewis' Mahlon Taits
Genres: jazz, chamber jazz, avant-folk, SXSW, sxsw 2006
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About Noahlewis' Mahlon Taits
Noahlewis’ Mahlon Taits is a group from Tokyo, and although their name sounds like a Hawaiian Band or a Cajun Group, they are indeed Japanese, and this fact provides some nice clues in enjoying their music. Their music is not traditional Japanese music nor are they a rock band just imitating American groups. They started as a type of 1920s string band, mixing string instruments like hawaiian guitar, mandolin, cellos, with haunting musical saw and some woodwinds. They sounded like a '20s group, playing just for fun in their local area. Their aim was not copying '20s music, but instead blended almost every kind of music they loved. Of course they loved country blue and dance bands, but also ethnic music from all over the world, as well as '50s R&B, Phil Spector, John Fahey, Joe Meek, Raymond Scott, Alec Wilder, Martin Denny, Sun Ra, "classical" music from Debussy to Reich and so on. (As you may guess, they are vinyl / 78rpm junkies and one of the members in the group has run the phonograph record shop NOAHLEWIS’ RECORDS in Shimokitazawa, for more than ten years.) They tried to mold and rebuild songs that they found on old phonograph records, so at that time they didn’t compose original songs. The group was formed in the late 1990s. Koya Abe (Hawaiian guitar, bass), who was a shop clerk in one of the few vintage record shops in Shibuya, started his solo project as NOAH LEWIS, which soon became an octet and was renamed NOAHLEWIS’ MAHLON TAITS. The group consisted of Midori Sato (violin), Yoriko Matsumoto (accordion), Bo Suzuki (bj, dr), Ryo Takematsu (g), Fumiya Morita (musical Saw, Jug, woodwinds), Tomoaki Oshima (ukulele,trombone), and the drummer Soichiro Suzuki who was already known in the group called “World Standard”. After a few years Soichiro Suzuki quit the band, and in 2008 Midori Sato also left. The sound began to change, and they started to compose their own material and started using vintage electric instruments. Though they are akin to a 50s R&B combo, the use of musical saw, accordion, and other additional instruments adds a unique twist. Every member has a job, and due to this fact, their live performances are quite rare, though they have played at events with some high-profile foreign performers including Dame Darcy, Geoff Muldaur, and Janet Klien, and they have appeared at SXSW 2001 and 2006. (em records)
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