Yasuhiro Yoshigaki
Yasuhiro Yoshigaki 芳垣安洋 | |
|---|---|
Aarhus, Denmark 2015 | |
| Background information | |
| Born | 1959 (age 66–67) Nishinomiya, Hyōgo, Japan |
| Genres | Jazz, Free jazz, Free improvisation, Experimental music, Rock |
| Occupations | Drummer, percussionist |
| Instruments | Drums, percussion |
| Years active | 1980s–present |
| Member of | Rovo, Altered States, ONJQ, Orquesta Libre, Orquesta Nudge! Nudge!, Emergency!, Vincent Atmicus |
| Website | y-yoshigaki.com/en/ |
Yasuhiro Yoshigaki (芳垣安洋, born 1959) is a Japanese drummer and percussionist, noted for his command of rhythm in jazz and ensemble settings.[1] He is also highly regarded in free improvisation and has collaborated with musicians in Japan and abroad, including Otomo Yoshihide and John Zorn.[2] He is one of the twin drummers of the post-rock band Rovo and the leader of Vincent Atmicus, an ensemble distinguished by twin drums, strings, brass, and layered percussion to create dense, polyrhythmic textures.[3][4] He has also led long-running projects as a bandleader, including Orquesta Libre and Orquesta Nudge! Nudge!.[5][6]
Career
1970s
Yoshigaki began playing drums in his final year of high school, encouraged by a friend.[7] After entering Kwansei Gakuin University, he started performing jazz, inspired by Weather Report’s Black Market and Jaco Pastorius’s Jaco Pastorius.[8] While still a student he performed at live houses and jazz clubs in the Kansai region.
1980s
From 1984 for three years he served as a regular drummer at the Osaka jazz club Royal Horse. Seeking to start a band he wanted to hear on the local scene, Yoshigaki conceived the ensemble First Edition in 1985 and launched it in 1986. The original members included Yutaka Ohara (tb), Itayuki Shioya (as), Eiichiro Arasaki (ts), Makoto Aoyagi (p, as), and Yosuke Inoue (b; later replaced by Osamu Mihara). The group combined arranged material with open forms; later Kazuhisa Uchihashi (g) joined and activities expanded to Tokyo and Nagoya.[9] As an offshoot, he co-founded Altered States around 1990; early sets included rock-like and vocal numbers, moving toward fully improvised performances by Mosaic (1994).[10] He also formed the improvising trio SIGHTS with Yutaka Ohara and Hiroshi Funato; in 1995 the trio recorded Tatta and toured.[11]
1990s
He pursued further projects, including a duo with Sam Bennett; the large-ensemble Brass Chant (up to twelve players); prompter for the Kansai edition of John Zorn’s Cobra; and the acoustic trio Hōrakuya with Yuji Katsui and Yoshinori Motoki. Performing more frequently in Tokyo, he met Otomo Yoshihide (leading to Ground Zero), Daisuke Fuwa (Shibusashirazu), and Yuji Katsui (Rovo). Following the 1995 Great Hanshin–Awaji Earthquake, he relocated to Tokyo in 1997. By 1999 he had joined Otomo's ONJQ and Naruyoshi Kikuchi's Date Course Pentagon Royal Garden (DCPRG), and launched his leader band Vincent Atmicus.[12]
2000s
In the 2000s he recorded and performed with Otomo Yoshihide and Bill Laswell under the name Soup, issuing live and studio recordings.[13] He also continued to lead multiple ensembles, including Vincent Atmicus and the percussion-focused Orquesta Nudge! Nudge!.
2010s
His large ensemble Vincent Atmicus continued to appear live, including documented concerts at Shinjuku Pit Inn on 12 June 2010 (official archive) and 9 December 2010 (independent review).[14][15] He also launched and led the large-ensemble project Orquesta Libre (active since 2011), which reinterprets familiar repertoire. In July 2012 the group issued two debut albums and performed in Europe (including the Copenhagen Jazz Festival) and at FUJI ROCK FESTIVAL ’12.[16][17][18] A precursor iKnoW project—centered on Thelonious Monk's music (the name "iKNOW" reads "MONK" in reverse)—is documented in a 2012 guide to Japanese jazz (p.166).[19] His project MoGoToYoYo appeared at the Aarhus Jazz Festival and the Copenhagen Jazz Festival in July 2017, as documented by festival listings and a review.[20][21]
2020s
Yoshigaki remains active with Rovo and other ensembles and continues to perform in Japan and abroad.[22] He leads the live unit iKnoW Electric Re-Bop Double Band, developed in the 2020s as a continuation of his iKnoW concept.
Gallery
Discography
Emergency!
- Loveman Plays Psychedelic Swing (2002)
- Loveman Prays For Psychical Sing (2003)
- Live In Copenhagen (2010)
Otomo Yoshihide, Bill Laswell and Yasuhiro Yoshigaki
Fernando Saunders / Yasuhiro Yoshigaki
- Devotion (2005)
Yasuhiro Yoshigaki (ds), Yoichi Okabe (ds), Yuji Katsui (vl), Keisuke Ota (vl), Taisei Aoki (tb), Osamu Matsumoto (tb), Hiroaki Mizutani (b), Kumiko Takara (per), Naruyoshi Kikuchi (sax: verließ das Ensemble nach der Show im Mai 2003)
- VINCENT I (2002)
- VINCENT II (2004)
- VINCENT III (2005)
Anima Mundi (Vazquez-Yoshigaki project)
- PRIMER ENCUENTRO (2007)
- SEGUNDO PUENTE (2007)
Orquesta Nudge! Nudge!
- BATUKA! (2005)
- Rhythm CHANT (2008)
- UTA NO KA TA TI (2012)
- Can't Help Falling in Love (2012)
Orquesta Libre + Suga Dairo + RON×II
- Rockin’ In Rhythm (2014)
- plays DUKE (2014)
Shoro Club
Yasuhiro Yoshigaki (ds, per), Otomo Yoshihide (g), Daisuke Fuwa (ac-b, el-b)
- from 1959 (2017)
On The Mountain
- ON THE MOUNTAIN (2020)
Collaborations
- BOYCOTT RHYTHM MACHINE (2004)
- BOYCOTT RHYTHM MACHINE II – VERSUS – (2006)
As a sideman
- Gyakuyunyū: Kōwankyoku (2014)
References
- ^ "芳垣安洋インタビュー 「また演奏することを楽しみたい」". CINRA.NET (in Japanese). 20 August 2012. Retrieved 30 August 2025.
- ^ "Yasuhiro Yoshigaki: Discography". JapanImprov.com. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "ROVO Official Website". rovo.jp. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "Vincent Atmicus『Vincent II』レビュー". Jazz in Japan. 22 November 2008. Retrieved 30 August 2025.
- ^ "Orquesta Libre – Feature". OTOTOY (in Japanese). 4 July 2012.
- ^ "Discography – Yasuhiro Yoshigaki Official Site". Yasuhiro Yoshigaki official site. Retrieved 30 August 2025.
- ^ [1]
- ^ "ディスアプローチメント/関西学院大学スイング・チャリオティアーズ". Swing Journal (in Japanese). 33 (7): 169. June 1979. Apple Music.
- ^ 『ジャズ批評』No.87、1996年4月号、pp.275–276.
- ^ 『ジャズ批評』No.87、1996年4月号、pp.276–277.
- ^ 『ジャズ批評』No.87、1996年4月号、p.277.
- ^ "Review of Vincent Atmicus". 13 October 2020. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "Soup Live". AllMusic. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "Past Live Archives 2010". y-yoshigaki.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "Vincent Atmicus — 2010/12/09 Shinjuku PIT INN (live review)". Take's Music Review (in Japanese). 9 December 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "Orquesta Libre – Feature". OTOTOY (in Japanese). 4 July 2012.
- ^ "祝・FUJI ROCK FESTIVAL'12出演!! Orquesta Libre". OTOTOY (in Japanese). 24 July 2012.
- ^ "Past News – Yasuhiro Yoshigaki Official Site". y-yoshigaki.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ 田中, 啓文 (10 February 2012). 聴いたら危険! ジャズ入門 (in Japanese). KADOKAWA/アスキー新書. p. 166.
- ^ "MoGoToYoYo – Aarhus Jazz Festival 2017". jazzfest.dk. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ Grillo, Tyran (20 July 2017). "MoGoToYoYo in Denmark". ECM Reviews. Retrieved 9 October 2025.
- ^ "ROVO Official Website". rovo.jp. Retrieved 9 October 2025.