The Squid's Ear Magazine


Yoshizawa, Motoharu / Kim Dae Hwan: Way Of The Breeze (NoBusiness)

A rare 1993 live duo between Japanese avant-garde pioneers Motoharu Yoshizawa on electric bass and Kim Dae Hwan on percussion, this profound and genre-defying recording explores sound itself, blending space, silence, and spontaneous interaction into a philosophical, boundary-pushing acoustic journey that evokes elemental, organic sonic landscapes.
 

Price: $16.95



Quantity:

In Stock

Quantity in Basket: None

Log In to use our Wish List
Shipping Weight: 5.00 units


EU & UK Customers:
Discogs.com can handle your VAT payments
So please order through Discogs

Sample The Album:





product information:

Personnel:



Motoharu Yoshizawa-electric bass

Kim Dae Hwan-percussion


Click an artist name above to see in-stock items for that artist.




Label: NoBusiness
Catalog ID: NBCD 176
Squidco Product Code: 36213

Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: Poland
Packaging: Jewel Case
Recorded at Cafe Amores in Hofu City, Yamaguchi, Japan, on September 8th, 1993, by Takeo Suetomi.

Descriptions, Reviews, &c.

"This duo represents an experiment that pushes the boundaries of music itself. Their collaboration does not confine itself to genres such as free jazz or improvisational music. Instead, it stands as a sonic adventure that explores the very potential of sound. The moments of their collaboration, glimpses into the future of acoustic art, resonate not merely as music but as a philosophical inquiry into "sound" itself."-Nobusiness "This duo represents an experiment that pushes the boundaries of music itself. Their collaboration does not confine itself to genres such as free jazz or improvisational music. Instead, it stands as a sonic adventure that explores the very potential of sound. The moments of their collaboration, glimpses into the future of acoustic art, resonate not merely as music but as a philosophical inquiry into "sound" itself."-Nobusiness



"I have spent over half a century considering the study of improvisational performance as my life's work, listening deeply.

There is jazz, rock, and blues-style ad-libbing, modal performances from folk music, compositions using electronic sounds, noise, and sampled concrete sounds, non-idiomatic styles, formats ranging from solo to large ensembles, and performers from those with almost no technical skill to those of godlike virtuosity.

Perhaps the free jazz and electric jazz I immersed myself in during adolescence became the foundation of my listening experience. And the existence of the ECM label cannot be ignored, for this label actively released many small-format improvisations like solos and duos. Lithuania's NoBusiness Records and Japan's ChapChap Records have carried on that legacy.

In solo performances, everything about the performer is laid bare - their background, confidence, skill, intention, and philosophy - all exposed as sound. It's a harsh situation, and to dare face it requires first youth, then maturity, and then a refined simplicity. Listening to a solo improvisation is, in essence, to confront that person directly.

But what about duos?

It's a contest, without winners or losers, where masters exchange techniques they have so thoroughly absorbed they are like personal signatures, all in the same space.

With a fierce fighting spirit, each strike and sound slices through the air.

It takes no time to make a sound - and yet, one could say, it takes as long as the performer has lived.

It's like what the ceramic artist Kanjiro Kawai once said.

These two performers introduced here need no further explanation.

What surprises me is that such an extraordinary performance has remained in the shadows until now.

Kim's percussion is simple and pure, completely different from Western, Latin, African, Indian, or Middle Eastern small percussion techniques - it's like the sea, like waves crashing, like spray shattered against rocks and dancing on the wind.

And Yoshizawa's bass is howling wind, distant thunder, flying clouds.

Yes, I hear here the border between sea and sky.


Artist Biographies

"Motoharu Yoshizawa (吉沢元治) (1931 - September 12, 1998) was an influential Japanese bassist known for playing in a distinctive free jazz and free improvisation style, sometimes deploying electronics and using the unusual self-designed five-string bass he referred to as the "Tiritack".

Yoshizawa collaborated with innumerable musicians over his long career; some of the better known include Masayuki Takayanagi, Masahiko Togashi, Takehisa Kosugi, Mototeru Takagi, Kaoru Abe, Steve Lacy, Dave Burrell, Derek Bailey, Evan Parker, Barre Phillips, Butch Morris, Elliott Sharp, Ikue Mori, Keiji Haino, Kan Mikami, Kazuki Tomokawa, Christopher Yohmei Blasdel & Tenko.

Yoshizawa began playing in a free style in the mid-1960s, in groups with Yosuke Yamashita and Kazunori Takeda, as well as in a famous jam session with Elvin Jones during John Coltrane's Japan tour of 1966. Yoshizawa's own trio with Mototeru Takagi was said to have been pivotal for Japanese free jazz, though no recordings survive. In 1969, Yoshizawa played with Masahiko Togashi's famous quartet and Masayuki Takayanagi's New Directions group, participating in both groups' landmark recording sessions of that year.Yoshizawa was a pioneer of solo bass performance, his experiments synchronous with those of Barre Phillips. He first played this style in 1969, though nothing was recorded until several years later. In the mid-1970s, Yoshizawa recorded three albums for solo bass. Later in the decade he had a fruitful collaboration with alto saxophonist Kaoru Abe, which led to the recording of one album, Nord.

In the 1990s, Yoshizawa began experimenting with an effects-laden, five-string bass of his own design. He spent six months living and playing in New York in 1989-90.

-Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motoharu_Yoshizawa)
6/16/2025

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

"Kim Dae Hwan (김대환) was one of Korea's most renowned western style percussionists. He died 70 years old. It was very fast to be gone. We cannot forget his wildness and smile. At first He was a drummer of the first Korean rock group ADD4 formed by Shin Joong Hyun who is the godfather of Korean rock. Then he formed his own band called Kim Trio (the principle of this band was never performing the same songs), and so on. He joined the first Korean free music group Kang Tae Hwan Trio in 1978. After that, he had performed by solo musician, and collaborated with many kinds of artists till his death. And also he was a famous calligraphist. His work, 346 letters on a gain of rice, appears on Guinness Book. He had performed calligraphy on his stage every time. Only this was his leader album put on the market formally before he died. He played very simple drum sets that constructed with a roto-tom and cymbals and Korean traditional drum, with six sticks in his hands. It was very silently. Above his drum sound, haegeum (Korean traditional instrument) by Mrs. Kang Eun Il was crying bitterly or weeping gently."

-Prog Not Frog (http://prognotfrog.blogspot.com/2008/10/kim-dae-hwan-huk-woo-black-rain-korea.html)
6/16/2025

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.


Track Listing:



1. Drifting Breeze 17:36

2. Flowing On 19:43

3. Into The Infinite Greene 28:47

Related Categories of Interest:


Improvised Music
Electro-Acoustic
Electro-Acoustic Improv
Asian Improvisation & Jazz
Duo Recordings
New in Improvised Music
Recent Releases and Best Sellers

Search for other titles on the label:
NoBusiness.


Recommended & Related Releases:
Lyons, Jimmy
Rivbea Live! Series, Volume 3
(NoBusiness)
Continuing NoBusiness' series of historic loft concerts at Sam Rivers' Studio Rivbea, alto saxophonist Jimmy Lyons leads a quintet featuring bassoonist Karen Borca, bassist Hayes Burnett, and drummers Henry Letcher and Syd Smart in two electrifying 1970s performances, delivering fervent free jazz marked by intricate interplay and dynamic improvisation.
Burrell, Dave / Sam Woodyard
The Lost Session, 1979 Paris
(NoBusiness)
Mengelberg, Misha / Sabu Toyozumi
The Analects Of Confucius
(NoBusiness)
Previously unreleased, this remarkable 2000 duo performance from Dutch pianist Misha Mengelberg and Japanese drummer Sabu Toyozumi captures their playful and philosophical interplay in two extended improvisations, a Monk tribute, and a touching solo dedicated to Mengelberg's wife, blending wit, dynamic textures, and deep mutual respect in a session Toyozumi calls a personal tribute to his "guru."
Bailey / Toyozumi
Breath Awareness
(NoBusiness)
Derek Bailey's 1987 trip to Japan yielded a number of important recordings, including a duo with Mototeru Takagi, a trio with Sabu Toyozumi & Peter Brötzmann, and this concert at IMAI-Tei with Toyozumi, one of the first generation Japanese free improvisers and the only non-American to become a member of the AACM; here in three duos and Bailey's solo "Diaphragm".
Beger / Taubenfeld / Hazan / Drake
Cosmic Waves
(NoBusiness)
Two studio sessions of ebullient improv from the quartet of Israeli tenor saxophonist Albert Beger, bass clarinetist Ziv Taubenfeld, double bassist & guimbri player Shay Hazan, and Chicago drummer Hamid Drake, from hard-blowing collective interplay to introspective discourse, ending with Beger's reflective composition "Astral Visit"; a perfectly balanced album of modern jazz.
Borca / R. Brown / W. Parker / Workman / Nicholson / Murphy / Ibarra / Taylor-Baker
Good News Blues
(NoBusiness)
A vital member of groups led by Jimmy Lyons, Bill Dixon, Cecil Taylor, Joe Morris and William Parker, bassoonist Karen Borca is heard in two Vision Festival performances under her own name performing her own compositions in trio, quartet and quintet formations with luminaries Rob Brown, William Parker, Reggie Nicholson, Susie Ibarra, Todd Nicholson, Paul Murphy and Newman Taylor-Baker.
Brotzmann / Toyozumi
TRIANGLE, Live at OHM, 1987
(NoBusiness)
Never before issued, this stunning concert between long-time collaborators, Japanese drummer Sabu Toyozumi and German multi-reedist Peter Brötzmann performing on tenor saxophone and tarogato, was captured live at OHM, in Koiwa, Tokyo in 1987, in an energetic and enthusiastic free concert of impressive skill and expression, a vital addition to the discography of both.
Hwan, Kim Dae / Choi Sun Bae
Korean Fantasy
(NoBusiness)
A live concert from 1999 at Aspirante, Hofu City, Yamaguchi, Japan between Korean improvisers Choi Sun Bae on trumpet & harmonica and Kim Dae Hwan on drums, both members of Kang Tae Hwan trio in their first duo, performing three dialogs with Hwan playing traditional Korean drums in a "one beat" style while Choi Sun Bae plays both electric and acoustic trumpet, including an extended solo section.
Riley, Howard / Keith Tippett
Journal Four
(NoBusiness)
Having collaborated as a duo first at Goldsmiths College in 1981, UK pianists Howard Riley and Keith Tippett met for this spectacular 2016 concert as part of The Steinway Spirio Two-Piano Festival in Soho, London, each bringing decades of experience as lyrical and inventive players, together complementing each other in merging disparate forms from Joplin to Debussy to Mujician.
Bae, Choi Sun / Junji Hirose / Motoharu Yoshizawa / Kim Dae Hwan
Arirang Fantasy
(NoBusiness)
A 1995 live concert at Romanisches Cafe in Tokyo from the South Korean and Japanese free improvising quartet of Choi Sun Bae on trumpet, Junji Hirose on tenor & soprano saxophones, Motoharu Yoshizawa on electric vertical five strings bass, and Kim Dae Hwan on percussion, in five collective improvisations including an homage to Charlie Parker.
Blaser, Samuel / Gerry Hemingway
Oostum [VINYL]
(NoBusiness)
A fantastic album of free improvisation between two creative and versatile players captured live at Kerkje van Oostum, Groningen, The Netherlands in 2015--percussionist Gerry Hemingway and trombonist Samuel Blaser--both using immense talent and unorthodox approaches to their instruments as they shift from unexpected atmospheres to lyrical richness.
Phillips, Barre / Motoharu Yoshizawa
Oh My, Those Boys!
(NoBusiness)
Two bass players--European free improv legend Barre Phillips and Japanese master Motoharu Yoshizawa--met at Cafe Amores in Yamaguchi, Japan in 1994, with Phillips on an amplified acoustic upright and Yoshizawa using an electric vertical 5-string bass of his own design, as the two weave and merge their unique sounds and approaches in a brilliant concert.



Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought:
Rasten, Fredrik w/ Asterales
Fuse Modulations
(thanatosis produktion)
Herzog / Muche / Nillesen
Anasynthesi
(thanatosis produktion)
Bromander, Vilhelm Unfolding Orchestra
Jorden Vi Arvde [VINYL]
(thanatosis produktion)
A stunning second album from Swedish bassist and composer Vilhelm Bromander's Unfolding Orchestra, expanding on his acclaimed debut with richly textured, spiritually resonant compositions inspired by political urgency and environmental reflection, featuring a 13-piece ensemble delivering lush orchestrations, patient development, and profound, hopeful expression.
Various Artists
Archipelago
(Bathysphere Records)
Sinton, Josh
Couloir & Book Of Practitioners Vol. 2 Book "W" [2 CDs]
(FiP recordings)
Baritone saxophonist Josh Sinton continues his deep engagement with Steve Lacy's saxophone etudes in this 2-CD release, presenting fifteen spontaneous solo improvisations on Couloir, alongside a meticulous yet personal interpretation of Lacy's Book of Practitioners Vol. 2 "W", a suite of six structured études that explore sonic character through repetition, variation, and improvisation.
Zingaro, Carlos / Bruno Parrinha / Fred Lonberg-Holm / Joao Madeira
Enleio
(4DaRecord)
Zingaro, Carlos / Flo Stoffner / Fred Lonberg-Holm / Joao Madeira
Na Parede
(4DaRecord)
Le Vice Anglais (Pires / Parrinha)
vas-y
(4DaRecord)
Mira Trio (Furioso / Mira / Gibson)
Machinerie
(4DaRecord)
Blending cellist Miguel Mira's structural premeditation with the spontaneity of free improvisation, the trio of Mira, saxophonist Yedo Gibson, and drummer Felice Furioso crafts a richly textural and architectonically inspired session, recorded in Lisbon, where extended techniques and expressive interplay shape a dynamic sonic vision of figurative expressionism in sound.
Cage, John
Chamber Works 1943-1951
(Another Timbre)
A superb interpretation of John Cage's early chamber works, performed by members of Apartment House and pianist Kerry Yong, recorded at The Old School, in Starston, UK, highlighting Cage's intricate balance of rhythm and resonance through prepared piano, strings, and percussion, captured in detailed and intimate recordings by Simon Reynell at The Old School in Starston, UK.
Kimura, Izumi / Gerry Hemingway
How The Dust Falls
(Auricle)
The second duo release from pianist Izumi Kimura and drummer/percussionist Gerry Hemingway —also known for their powerful trio collaborations with bassist Barry Guy —furthers their exploration of structured improvisation through patient, intricately shaped performances, including an evocative reimagining of Blind Willie Johnson's "Dark Was the Night", blending lyrical depth with dynamic sonic experimentation.
Dan, Lao
To Hit a Pressure Point
(Relative Pitch)
Recorded solo in Hangzhou, China, saxophonist and suona player Lao Dan merges Chinese folk motifs with the raw energy of punk, the spontaneity of free jazz, and the abrasiveness of noise and rock forms, creating a fiercely expressive and unpredictable improvisational landscape driven by aesthetic tension and fearless experimentation.
Kawashima, Makoto
arteria
(Relative Pitch)
Berlin Art Quartet (Schubert / Bauer / Muller / Bruggemann)
Live At MIM
(Unisono Records)
Formed in 2013 by drummer Reinhard Brüggemann, the Berlin Art Quartet channels the spirit of the New York Art Quartet, with saxophonist Matthias Schubert, trombonist Matthias Müller, and bassist Matthias Bauer performing a powerful live set of free jazz, blending fiery interplay, dynamic shifts, extended techniques, and raw yet thoughtful improvisation.




The Squid's Ear Magazine

The Squid's Ear Magazine

© 2002-, Squidco LLC