Tatsuro Murakami - Mita Koyama-cho (2025)

Artist: Tatsuro Murakami
Title: Mita Koyama-cho
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Mystery Circles
Genre: Ambient, Post-Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:34:37
Total Size: 131 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Mita Koyama-cho
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Mystery Circles
Genre: Ambient, Post-Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:34:37
Total Size: 131 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Tatsuro Murakami - 1-11-5 Mita, Minato-ku, Tokyo (4:19)
02. Tatsuro Murakami - Transitioning (4:03)
03. Tatsuro Murakami - Stunning Fragility (3:37)
04. Tatsuro Murakami - From the Oblivion, the Self Wishing for That Person... (3:24)
05. Tatsuro Murakami - Of All the Things You Left Behind, I Chose Only to Keep Impermanence (3:05)
06. Tatsuro Murakami - #105 (4:24)
07. Tatsuro Murakami - ...I Still Want to See (3:26)
08. Tatsuro Murakami - Unnoticed Stagnation (2:55)
09. Tatsuro Murakami - All About Circles and Borders (3:01)
10. Tatsuro Murakami - Imminence of a Closure (2:23)
"Mita Koyama-cho" offers a fresh perspective on today's ambient music scene, blending acoustic and electronic elements into a rich, evocative soundscape. Murakami, a multi-instrumentalist, weaves together acoustic and jazz guitar, saxophone, fretless bass, and an array of keyboards—including vintage synthesizers, Mellotron, and acoustic piano. The result is a fusion of jazz, new age, folk, Brazilian music, and even 1970s progressive rock.
With an intuitive sense of melody and arrangement, Murakami layers warm cassette textures, vintage amp tones, and intricate string and saxophone orchestrations. "Mita Koyama-cho" is a deeply personal tribute to the musician’s family and the Tokyo neighborhood they once called home—demolished in 2024 due to corporate redevelopment.
With an intuitive sense of melody and arrangement, Murakami layers warm cassette textures, vintage amp tones, and intricate string and saxophone orchestrations. "Mita Koyama-cho" is a deeply personal tribute to the musician’s family and the Tokyo neighborhood they once called home—demolished in 2024 due to corporate redevelopment.