Nu Vision

33,00

out of stock

why we love this

With Nu Vision, Yuji Namiki builds a universe that is intricate, vast and teeming with endless possibilities. Dreamy and playful, but at the same time grounding and contemplative. Though it is very personal, it also feels very connected to the cosmos at large.

about the record

Nu Vision is therapeutic, multicolored, and alluringly strange, like a bioluminescent valley on an exoplanet discovered by a JAXA probe. With chopped-up kabuki howls and moonlit koto plucks placed ecstatically around floral billows of ambience and candy-coated synthesis, it at least approximates a picture-book about traditional Japan cut-up and recombined to become an instruction manual for building the aforementioned spacecraft.

The author of such a guidebook, Yuji Namiki aka nubo (stylized lowercase) began as a rapper and beatmaker, using hip-hop as a launchpad to traverse the plethora of genres he would later uncover during a formative stint working at a record shop in Tokyo. The musicological momentum he gained there would eventually lead him to establish his own label, UGFY Records, through which nubo and his peers continue to explore techno, acid-house, synthesis, and other electronic psychedelia.

However, a marked shift toward the contemplative tone of Nu Vision arose out of spiritual necessity after Namiki’s parents, concerned for his mental well-being as he slipped (understandably) further into dissatisfaction with the modern world, insisted he admit himself to a psychiatric hospital for three months. The pharmaceutical treatment he received there left him feeling creatively and emotionally detached. In his own words “judging that the world is sick, I was hospitalized, and it took me a year and a half,” before he was able to make music of any kind. When the time finally came for nubo to retrace the musical steps inward to his sense of self, contemplative sounds became the torchlight by which he illuminated the path. “It was time,” he says “to face my mind.”

He emerged with a Nu Vision, so to speak, one that folds his view of himself, his home country, and the cosmos at large into a psychospiritual codex of sound that only nubo himself could have fostered into existence. “The illusion for me is now the present world itself,” he explains, “when we can see the world as being full of love, the scenery changes dramatically and we realize that life is infinite.”

  1. 1 - Rain Wont 3:19
  2. 2 - Mezame 4:30
  3. 3 - TRIANGLE 4:13
  4. 4 - Yamatogokoro 2:07
  5. 5 - Ennichi 3:22
  6. 6 - Thinking With Your Soul 3:55
  7. 7 - Nu Vision 4:32
  8. 8 - Haino Uma 2:37
  9. 9 - Feel So Good Mornin’ 3:21
  10. 10 - On the Planet 2:46
  11. 11 - Moon Knows Everything 5:26
  12. 12 - Cycle of Love 3:22

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Nu Vision

33,00

out of stock

  1. 1 - Rain Wont 3:19
  2. 2 - Mezame 4:30
  3. 3 - TRIANGLE 4:13
  4. 4 - Yamatogokoro 2:07
  5. 5 - Ennichi 3:22
  6. 6 - Thinking With Your Soul 3:55
  7. 7 - Nu Vision 4:32
  8. 8 - Haino Uma 2:37
  9. 9 - Feel So Good Mornin’ 3:21
  10. 10 - On the Planet 2:46
  11. 11 - Moon Knows Everything 5:26
  12. 12 - Cycle of Love 3:22

Embed

Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.

why we love this

With Nu Vision, Yuji Namiki builds a universe that is intricate, vast and teeming with endless possibilities. Dreamy and playful, but at the same time grounding and contemplative. Though it is very personal, it also feels very connected to the cosmos at large.

about the record

Nu Vision is therapeutic, multicolored, and alluringly strange, like a bioluminescent valley on an exoplanet discovered by a JAXA probe. With chopped-up kabuki howls and moonlit koto plucks placed ecstatically around floral billows of ambience and candy-coated synthesis, it at least approximates a picture-book about traditional Japan cut-up and recombined to become an instruction manual for building the aforementioned spacecraft.

The author of such a guidebook, Yuji Namiki aka nubo (stylized lowercase) began as a rapper and beatmaker, using hip-hop as a launchpad to traverse the plethora of genres he would later uncover during a formative stint working at a record shop in Tokyo. The musicological momentum he gained there would eventually lead him to establish his own label, UGFY Records, through which nubo and his peers continue to explore techno, acid-house, synthesis, and other electronic psychedelia.

However, a marked shift toward the contemplative tone of Nu Vision arose out of spiritual necessity after Namiki’s parents, concerned for his mental well-being as he slipped (understandably) further into dissatisfaction with the modern world, insisted he admit himself to a psychiatric hospital for three months. The pharmaceutical treatment he received there left him feeling creatively and emotionally detached. In his own words “judging that the world is sick, I was hospitalized, and it took me a year and a half,” before he was able to make music of any kind. When the time finally came for nubo to retrace the musical steps inward to his sense of self, contemplative sounds became the torchlight by which he illuminated the path. “It was time,” he says “to face my mind.”

He emerged with a Nu Vision, so to speak, one that folds his view of himself, his home country, and the cosmos at large into a psychospiritual codex of sound that only nubo himself could have fostered into existence. “The illusion for me is now the present world itself,” he explains, “when we can see the world as being full of love, the scenery changes dramatically and we realize that life is infinite.”

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