Kaoru Abe - Biography
Most of Abe’s recordings have been released posthumously. The great Japanese label PSF has addressed much of Abe’s finest and earliest works, and they’re a marvel. Abe could make notes simply pour out of his instrument, in shimmering cascades of sound. Sinjuku captures him in 1970 in an early trio setting, with bass and drums. Jazz Bed is a splendid duo with Yamazaki, also the drummer for the powerful improv guitarist, Masayuki Takayanagi. Mokuyobi No Yoru and Winter 72 are both essential releases. Abe was fearless enough to explore other instrumentation as well, including guitar and – and this defines bravery – harmonica. None of the man’s albums are for the timid, but they merit scrutiny. Studio Sessions 12/03/1976 (2004, 3D Japan), is probably the most readily accessible of his late-era recordings.
Abe lived very hard life, even for a musician, and he didn’t live for very long. He was notorious for his democratic abuse of substances; by all accounts his personal life was equally troubled, starting with his marriage to author Suzuki Izumi. What’s sad about the shooting star that was Abe’s life, was that if he had lived for another decade, he would have been treated like royalty when the free-improv genre finally broke in the 1990s. As it stands, we’re left with spectacularly innovating and daring recordings of his singularly intense, titanic sound, a sound that continues to exert influence on subsequent generations of young musicians. Adolphe Sax probably wouldn’t have known what to think of of Kaoru Abe – most of Abe’s contemporaries were equally puzzled. But it’s fair to say that if Sax wanted the sound of his instrument to be loud, Abe was happy to oblige.
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