♪ Album Reviews · Japanese Jazz

Japanese Jazz

Kissa Bars, Late Nights, and Records That Got Expensive Fast

Japanese jazz culture wasn't an echo of American jazz, it was an obsession. The Three Blind Mice label pressed limited runs of local artists who had absorbed everything from Bill Evans and Thelonious Monk and were channeling it through their own sensibility, creating music that sat somewhere between post-bop and spiritual jazz. These records were originally sold for almost nothing in domestic-market pressings: now they sell for hundreds of dollars and have been rediscovered by collectors worldwide for the simple reason that they're extraordinary.

9 Albums Reviewed
14 Years Spanned
7 Labels
Scenery Cat Blow Up Toki High-Flying Rendezvous Parker's Mood Live in Japan Kemo-Sabe
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Scenery
Catalyst Records / We Release Jazz · 1976
Scenery
Ryo Fukui
★★★★★
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01
Album Review · Jazz Piano Trio

Scenery

Ryo Fukui, 1976 · Catalyst Records
Personnel
Ryo Fukui, piano  ·  Satoshi Denpo, bass  ·  Yoshinori Fukui, drums

Ryo Fukui was a self-taught pianist from Hokkaido who discovered jazz records in his twenties and became obsessed. Scenery was his debut and it sounds like someone who has been listening with complete attention: the voicings are sophisticated, the touch is distinct, and there's a restraint that feels genuinely Japanese rather than imitative. He covers Bud Powell and Bill Evans and plays them like they're his own material because by the time he recorded this they basically were.

"Scenery" (the original) is the highlight: a rolling, meditative piece that doesn't resolve the way you expect it to. This record was pressed in tiny quantities in 1976 and sold for almost nothing. Now it sells for several hundred dollars and deserves every penny.

"He covers Powell and Evans and plays them like his own material, because by the time he recorded this they basically were."
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Cat
Three Blind Mice / We Release Jazz · 1976
Cat
Hiroshi Suzuki
★★★★★
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02
Album Review · Jazz Trombone / Spiritual Jazz

Cat

Hiroshi Suzuki, 1976 · Three Blind Mice
Personnel
Hiroshi Suzuki, trombone  ·  Takeru Muraoka, soprano saxophone  ·  Masahiko Sato, piano, keyboards  ·  Yoshio Suzuki, bass  ·  Takeshi Inomata, drums

Cat is the album that turned Japanese jazz from a niche collector obsession into an Instagram aesthetic and that's both a compliment and a mild complaint. The cover is beautiful, the music is beautiful, and neither of those things is a coincidence. Hiroshi Suzuki plays trombone with a warm, singing quality that's unusual for the instrument: not brassy or aggressive, but lyrical, almost sighing.

Masahiko Sato on keyboards creates a slightly electric shimmer underneath that places it right at the intersection of straight jazz and early fusion. The title track is worth the price of admission alone. Three Blind Mice albums pressed for the Japanese domestic market are notoriously hard to find in good condition, which is why the We Release Jazz reissue has been so welcome. This record stands on its own even if you've never seen the cover.

"Suzuki plays trombone with a warm, singing quality that's unusual for the instrument: lyrical, almost sighing."
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Blow Up
Three Blind Mice · 1973
Blow Up
Isao Suzuki
★★★★☆
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03
Album Review · Jazz Bass / Post-Bop

Blow Up

Isao Suzuki, 1973 · Three Blind Mice
Personnel
Isao Suzuki, bass  ·  Masahiko Sato, piano  ·  Yoshio Suzuki, guitar  ·  Takeshi Inomata, drums

Isao Suzuki is a bassist who leads from the front rather than anchoring the back, and on Blow Up he plays with a melodic freedom that makes the bass feel like the lead voice it rarely gets to be. Masahiko Sato shows up again (he was on half the Three Blind Mice catalog) and brings a searching, harmonically rich approach to the piano. The rhythm section cooks without being showy.

The title track has a propulsive, almost hypnotic quality: it builds and builds and then releases in a way that feels genuinely physical. This is a more intense record than Scenery or Cat, less immediately pretty and more demanding, but once it gets its hooks in you it doesn't let go. Three Blind Mice at its most adventurous.

"Suzuki plays with a melodic freedom that makes the bass feel like the lead voice it rarely gets to be."
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Toki
Three Blind Mice · 1975
Toki
Hidefumi Toki Quartet
★★★★☆
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04
Album Review · Jazz / Fusion

Toki

Hidefumi Toki Quartet, 1975 · Three Blind Mice
Personnel
Hidefumi Toki, alto saxophone  ·  Masahiko Sato, piano, keyboards  ·  Yoshio Suzuki, bass  ·  Takeshi Inomata, drums

Toki sits at the fuzzy edge between straight jazz and fusion, the same territory that Mahavishnu Orchestra and early Weather Report were exploring around the same time but with a distinctly Japanese emotional temperature. Toki on alto plays with a clean, focused tone and a tendency to hold notes longer than you expect, which creates moments of real suspension.

Masahiko Sato's keyboards shift between acoustic and electric in a way that keeps the texture constantly interesting. The rhythm section here is the same Yoshio Suzuki/Takeshi Inomata pair from several other Three Blind Mice records: they clearly had chemistry and it shows. This one has a slightly melancholy quality that sets it apart from the more energetic Three Blind Mice releases.

"Toki's tendency to hold notes longer than you expect creates moments of real suspension."
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High-Flying
Nipponophone · 1976
High-Flying
Hiromasa Suzuki
★★★★☆
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05
Album Review · Jazz Fusion / Jazz-Rock

High-Flying

Hiromasa Suzuki, 1976 · Nipponophone
Personnel
Hiromasa Suzuki, piano, keyboards

Hiromasa Suzuki's High-Flying catches a moment when Japanese jazz musicians were fully absorbing the electric Miles Davis influence and doing something interesting with it. The album has a keyboard-forward, slightly cosmic quality: electric piano layered with acoustic, horn lines that circle and repeat, grooves that are more funk-adjacent than swing.

It doesn't have the purity of the Three Blind Mice piano trio records but it has energy and atmosphere that those records sometimes lack. Think Headhunters without the American grit, or early Weather Report with a softer edge. Collectors have priced this one accordingly. Hearing it you understand why.

"Electric piano layered with acoustic, horn lines that circle and repeat. Think Headhunters without the American grit."
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Rendezvous
Elektra Records · 1984
Rendezvous
Sadao Watanabe
★★★★☆
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06
Album Review · Smooth Jazz / Contemporary Jazz

Rendezvous

Sadao Watanabe, 1984 · Elektra Records
Personnel
Sadao Watanabe, alto saxophone

By 1984 Sadao Watanabe had been Japan's most internationally recognized jazz musician for a decade and Rendezvous is his most polished crossover attempt. He recorded it in New York with American session players and the production has that mid-eighties sheen that either bothers you or doesn't.

The alto playing is pristine throughout: Watanabe has one of the most consistently beautiful tones in the instrument's history, and he never plays a harsh or unthinking note. This isn't the deepest record he made but it's an example of how good his fundamentals are. Even in a heavily produced contemporary jazz context, the actual saxophone playing is worth your attention.

"Watanabe has one of the most consistently beautiful tones in the alto's history. He never plays a harsh or unthinking note."
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Parker's Mood: Live at Bravas Club '85
Elektra Records · 1985
Parker's Mood: Live at Bravas Club '85
Sadao Watanabe
★★★★★
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07
Album Review · Post-Bop / Live Jazz

Parker's Mood: Live at Bravas Club '85

Sadao Watanabe, 1985 · Elektra Records
Personnel
Sadao Watanabe, alto saxophone

This live set pays tribute to Charlie Parker and it works because Watanabe doesn't try to sound like Bird: he plays Parker's compositions in his own voice, which is warmer, more lyrical, and less percussive than the original. The club atmosphere is palpable on the recording: you can hear the audience responding to solos, the room has the intimacy of a small jazz venue rather than a concert hall.

The band is tight and sympathetic. "Donna Lee" and "Ko Ko" are the showpieces. What this record demonstrates is how deeply Watanabe absorbed the bebop vocabulary and then filtered it through something distinctly his own. It's a generous, joyful record.

"He plays Parker's compositions in his own voice, warmer and more lyrical than the original."
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Live in Japan
Arista GRP · 1981
Live in Japan
GRP All Stars
★★★★☆
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08
Album Review · Fusion / Contemporary Jazz

Live in Japan

GRP All Stars, 1981 · Arista GRP
Personnel
Dave Grusin, piano, keyboards  ·  Tom Scott, saxophone  ·  Lee Ritenour, guitar  ·  Harvey Mason, drums  ·  Marcus Miller, bass

This is fusion at its most polished and crowd-pleasing and there's nothing wrong with that. The GRP All-Stars at this point were basically the A-team of contemporary jazz session players: Lee Ritenour, Tom Scott, Harvey Mason, Dave Grusin. Playing live in Japan for an audience that loved this music deeply.

The Japanese jazz audience of the early 1980s was famously enthusiastic and you can feel it in the performance. "Mountain Dance" is the centerpiece: a Grusin original with a keyboard melody that's been on smooth jazz playlists ever since. This isn't adventurous music but it's exceptionally well-played music and the live recording captures an energy that the studio GRP albums sometimes lacked.

"The Japanese jazz audience was famously enthusiastic and you can feel it on the recording."
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Kemo-Sabe
Yupiteru Records · 1979
Kemo-Sabe
Masao Nakajima
★★★★☆
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09
Album Review · Jazz / Fusion

Kemo-Sabe

Masao Nakajima, 1979 · Yupiteru Records
Personnel
Masao Nakajima, piano

Kemo-Sabe is one of those Japanese jazz records that circulates among collectors more than it gets written about, which means most people who own a copy found it through word of mouth or a lucky bin find rather than any kind of press. Nakajima's piano playing sits somewhere between post-bop and early fusion: harmonically inventive, rhythmically flexible, never quite predictable.

The Yupiteru label was a small domestic imprint and this record had a very limited original pressing, which explains both the obscurity and the price. What you get is a session that sounds genuinely exploratory rather than calculated, which is increasingly rare in any era. Worth seeking out.

"A session that sounds genuinely exploratory rather than calculated, which is increasingly rare in any era."