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Susumu Yokota
Acid Mt. Fuji = 赤富士
Sublime Records (MMDS24004LP)
Release date: Sep 13, 2024, Worldwide
Susumu Yokota's venerated 1994 classic Acid Mt. Fuji is reissued in expanded, deluxe fashion, as part of the 30th anniversary celebrations of the label that originally released it.
Japan's Musicmine - specifically its electronic subsidiary Sublime - released the album on June 29, 1994, simultaneously with Ken Ishii's Reference To Difference, as their inaugural joint offering. Tantamount to a fusion of ambient acid/rave - then still nascent in Japan - with new age music, Susumo Yokota was likely the best man for the job at the time. With his first album, The Frankfurt-Tokyo Connection, he'd not yet established his electro-pastoralist style, yet it was Acid Mt. Fuji that divined the latter-day emotes of Sakura, a new age so adroitly fused with electronica yet emulable by few.
Though the later years of Yokota's life have been couched in a good deal of privacy and mystery, Acid Mt. Fuji certainly betrays a fittingly shrewd and introspective character on the part of the artist, one that served him well. Its long, drawn-out nature soundscapes - tempered by the piquant sounds of modern synths like the TB-303, which animistically, pseudohallucinogenically blend with the animal sounds themselves - recall something like an alpine augur's waking dream.
A1
Zenmai
A2
Kinoko
A3
Meijijingu
B1
Saboten
B2
Oh My God
B3
Tambarin
C1
Oponchi
C2
Ao-oni
C3
Akafuji
D1
Alphaville
D2
Tanuki
E1
Floating G
E2
H
E3
B
F1
F
F2
2 H