
Chicago art-jazz metalers slow down, get weirder.
Yakuza - SamsaraPosted by Editorial Intern on 24-May-06 @ 02:39 PM
[5/5] On their third album for as many record labels since 1999, Chicago's Yakuza take a big step forward from the "formula" of crazed-thrash-plus-screaming-free-jazz-sax established on their brilliant 2002 disc Way Of The Dead. They've slowed down a bit in the intervening four years, giving the songs (and the listener) room to breathe, and perhaps more importantly, frontman Bruce Lamont has learned how to sing. Seems he's also bought some more effects pedals for his tenor sax: This time out, the solos swirl almost psychedelically, rather than screeching Charles Gayle-style. All these changes indicate a sense of maturity that's very welcome in music this dense and challenging. Yakuza no longer have to whip out every trick in their book on every track; they're now making music that, like the best jazz and rock, develops organically as it goes along. And even without a 40-minute space-jam instrumental to close things out, Samsara is totally satisfying.
(PROSTHETIC) Phil Freeman
Official Website: http://www.prostheticrecords.com
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Also in this issue:
- Aereogramme
- Controller.Controller
- Loose Fur
- Magneta Lane
- The New Amsterdams
- Placebo
- Theo And The Skyscrapers
- Yeah Yeah Yeahs
- Das Kapital
- Far-Less
- Love Equals Death
- No Trigger
- SoTheySay
- Voodoo Blue
- Bird Show
- MC Lars
- The Seconds
- Various Artists
- Cannibal Corpse
- Folly
- Lacuna Coil
- Sepultura
- Unearthly Trance
- Witch
- Witchery
- The Appleseed Cast
- Band Of Horses
- Isobel Campbell And Mark Lanegan
- The Essex Green
- I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness
- Maritime
- Quasi
- Various Artists
- Anti-Flag
- From First To Last
- Mates Of State
- Morrissey
- Liars
- Streetlight Manifesto
- The Flaming Lips
- Taking Back Sunday
- Other sections...


























[5/5] On their third album for as many record labels since 1999, Chicago's Yakuza take a big step forward from the "formula" of crazed-thrash-plus-screaming-free-jazz-sax established on their brilliant 2002 disc Way Of The Dead. They've slowed down a bit in the intervening four years, giving the songs (and the listener) room to breathe, and perhaps more importantly, frontman Bruce Lamont has learned how to sing. Seems he's also bought some more effects pedals for his tenor sax: This time out, the solos swirl almost psychedelically, rather than screeching Charles Gayle-style. All these changes indicate a sense of maturity that's very welcome in music this dense and challenging. Yakuza no longer have to whip out every trick in their book on every track; they're now making music that, like the best jazz and rock, develops organically as it goes along. And even without a 40-minute space-jam instrumental to close things out, Samsara is totally satisfying.
(PROSTHETIC) Phil Freeman
Official Website: 
