To celebrate today’s release of the 10th anniversary reissue of Kishi Bashi’s momentous debut album 151a, the acclaimed songwriter and violinist has shared a gorgeous new video for the original album’s lead single “Manchester” that mirrors the song’s cinematic, stirring, and romantic nature. "Everything changes when our main character comes back from a tough day at work and accidentally finds his own notebook,” explains director Fedor Prunkov. “He then remembers feelings of a past summer love and reminisces on a relationship that made him feel alive. Things end, but memories last forever.” The 22-track collection expands the original 151a with its 11 corresponding demo recordings, and features new artwork by Hsiao Ron Cheng as well as a detailed track-by-track and liner notes by Kishi Bashi (née Kaoru Ishibashi). The 151a 10th anniversary reissue is available today in multiple formats via Joyful Noise Recordings: double vinyl (including a limited edition orange variant) and double CD, plus a cassette of the demos only.
A corresponding March/April 2022 Anniversary Tour will take Kishi Bashi and his full band throughout the eastern U.S. and into Canada, and see them performing 151a in full alongside additional songs from his catalog. Dates include March 24th at NYC’s Irving Plaza and April 4th at Chicago’s Thalia Hall. A current itinerary is below and tickets are on sale now HERE. First, Kishi Bashi will perform at SXSW this year following the world premiere of his new documentary OMOIYARI: A Song Film By Kishi Bashi and a panel discussion on Japanese American identity in cinema on Monday, March 14th.
“I think when people get emotional about music, they are reacting and connecting to the humanity that the artist has successfully channeled. I poured my heart and personhood into this album in an act of catharsis, and 151a launched my career and remains one of my most popular albums to this day,” Kishi Bashi reflects in the reissue’s liner notes. “As I look back and listen to 151a on the occasion of its 10-year anniversary, I hear how much I’ve matured, and how I’m still the same (I love simple melodies and strings and analog synths).”
Released in 2012, 151a established Kishi Bashi as an artist to watch in his own right, following years performing as a multi-instrumentalist with artists including Regina Spektor and of Montreal (his collaboration on the latter’s album Paralytic Stalks proved formative). The title is a riff on the Japanese phrase “ichi-go ichi-e,” roughly translating to “one time, one place.” That’s exactly what this debut, produced and performed exclusively by Kishi Bashi, is: A singular time, an inimitable place, a launchpad for bigger and better things to come for the one-man orchestra.
151a—which earned praise from NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday, NPR Music (‘Best Songs of 2012’), Interview Magazine, and more—is a mediation between opposing drives, offering possible reconciliation but never promising it, and Kishi Bashi also uses the album as a vehicle to explore his cultural background. Using Japanese refrains as a compositional and textural device (the polyrhythmic grandeur of “Bright Whites”; the gleeful surrealism of “It All Began With a Burst”), he celebrates his heritage with earnestness—a portent of his future musical explorations, as seen in 2019’s acclaimed album Omoiyari and 2020’s Emigrant EP. Japanese phrases and couplets are sung as the response to Kishi Bashi’s resplendent calls, offering listeners a conversation that dovetails with the album’s themes of love, sentimentality, and self-discovery.
out on November 30, 2022
via Joyful Noise Recordings
out on January 26, 2022
via Joyful Noise Recordings
out on August 27, 2021
via Joyful Noise Recordings
out on July 01, 2021
via Joyful Noise Recordings
out on April 02, 2021
via Joyful Noise Recordings