Hiroki Tanaka – ‘Isan’

Credit: Yuka Yamaguchi

Hiroki Tanaka, formerly lead guitarist of Juno and Polaris-nominated YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN, captivates throughout his full-length album Isan, out today. Named for the Japanese word for “inheritance,” the album filters his Japanese-Canadian heritage and the tension of inherited religious structures through arrangements that move fluidly between hymnal gravitas, synth-laced rock, and hushed introspection, drawing comparisons to David Bowie, Animal Collective, and Mr. Bungle along the way.

“In order to explore my complex heritage as a descendant of Christian missionaries, I felt compelled to write songs that took the melodic, harmonic, and thematic material from hymns in a Japanese hymnbook I inherited from my grandparents,” Tanaka explains. “As an atheist, I wanted to explore biblical themes from a more scholarly, and secular, perspective. Much like how Michael Ondaatje based In The Skin of a Lion off of the Epic of Gilgamesh, I researched the hymns, proverbs, and passages in The Bible, and used that as a launchpad for my own songwriting.”

Tanaka’s own arrangement of Isamu Miyagawa’s hymn “Ikoi” opens the album with a compelling sense of motion. Stomping rhythms and a glimmering, pulsing tonal intensity move into bellowing vocal elements, consuming with palpable emotion. The hymn’s creator, Miyagawa, was also the inspiration for subsequent track “Yamato,” melding a debonair rock drive and dynamic vocal presence, swelling from suave descriptions to ardent yelps. “We’re homeless everywhere,” Tanaka’s fierce vocals let out, evolving into a synth-laden hook — “everything for Yamato!” The sequence thematically confronts displacement, via “homeless everywhere” and shipwreck imagery, its title-ready beckoning thereafter suggesting both devotion to heritage and the complexity of carrying that identity across oceans.

The album consistently excels in compelling, artful lyricism, embodying Tanaka’s Japanese-Canadian heritage and the effects of inherited religious structures on modern life, through a scholarly lens. “Shame” is another introspective gem, weaving mellow keys amidst introspective vocals, which emit a somber admission — “I fear that man is me” — as haunting organs and pitter-pattering percussion infuse; shades of Radiohead show there. Buzzing synths further the invigorating sense, as a confrontation with self stirs. “My approach was to modernize the lyrics and explore ‘Shame’ provocatively (noting that the Parable of the Lost Son is exclusively a story of men forgiving other men for their fragile masculinity),” Tanaka says.

Another standout track, “Nation of Love” embraces a lusher pop disposition amidst “the trees are on fire / oh my god, the ice is thin” cautions. The dreamy, trickling synth tones build into a harmonious chorus, with surfy backing vocal harmonizing contrasting a blissful sense of purpose with an evident deterioration of circumstances around them. Album finale “Golden House” delights as well, its piano-led arrangement and theatrical vocals consuming. “Brimstone feels so familiar,” they let out into gorgeous strings and soaring vocal mystique, the ensuing “when I was young” retrospections expanding into an array of both bustling fervor and concluding starry-eyed wonder. Isan is an immersive, heady success from Hiroki Tanaka, capturing a journey of self and cultural reverence.

Isan by Hiroki Tanaka

“Yamato” and other tracks featured this month can be streamed on the updating Obscure Sound’s ‘Emerging Singles’ Spotify playlist.

The post Hiroki Tanaka – ‘Isan’ appeared first on Obscure Sound: Indie Music Blog.

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