Akane Hosaka
© 2008 Photo by Eric Bossick
   
Akane Hosaka - Ohana Ageru
   
   
   
Akane Hosaka’s lunging rhythms and deliciously retro melodies hook you into a universe of gleeful wallabies, little drummer boy monkeys and motley robots; think Yellow Magic Orchestra reworked by Jacno, a Web 2.0 style 21st century referencing of the Sixties precursors of electro.

Strangely, images are the initial source of Akane Hosaka’s musical inspiration. Landscape, exhibitions and children’s books; images that become emotions which evoke the music she then transcribes. She is particularly sensitive to the graphic forms and architectural fantasy of artists such as Keiji Ito, Archigram and Bruno Munari. And just try questioning her on the stop-motion films of sixties and seventies France! It takes a true expert to catch her out on Colargol (Barnaby or Jeremy the Bear in the English-speaking world), The Magic Roundabout and Chapi-Chapo.

Overly nostalgic? What?! Akane Hosaka was simply born in another space/time continuum and has a penchant for the glory years when artists with unlimited imagination cleared whole expanses of creative ground. Same goes for her musical influences: Raymond Scott, Perrey & Kingsley and Dick Hyman have pride of place, but pretty much anything relating to the golden age of analogue synthesizers gets a ticket. Akane Hosaka has taken this stuff in, processed it and is now turning it out in an interpretation of her current cosmology. Tune in for musical reworkings of daily incidents in the life of…

Akane Hosaka is a naturally reserved performer and her concerts are rare, precious and sometimes destabilizing because of the contrast between the playful music and the austerity of her onstage persona. But here is a perfectionist, a sort of blacksmith in the smithy, most at ease honing her electronic compositions in the studio. She says, “Making sound has been my all consuming passion since I was a kid and I think about little else. Composition has become second nature for me.” She shuns strict labelling of her music, resisting being categorised as “electronic pop” and preferring to allow her imagination free rein.

© 2008 Franck Stofer / SONORE

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Press reviews:
- Rare Frequency
- Noise Loop
 
Selected discography:
- Niko Niko Denki Muzic (2008)
- Ele-KID-on (2005)
- Electric for Small Drop Channel (2004)
 

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