Technique of Relief explained

Technique of Relief
Type:Album
Artist:Susumu Hirasawa
Cover:Susumu Hirasawa - Technique of Relief album art.jpg
Released:August 21, 1998
Studio:Internal Studio, Bangkok
Studio Parkside, Minami, Toda, Saitama
Genre:Symphonic rock, progressive rock, world music
Length:53:44
Label:Nippon Columbia, TESLAKITE
Producer:Eiichi Yamakawa (exec.), Susumu Hirasawa
Prev Title:Siren
Prev Year:1996
Next Title:Philosopher's Propeller
Next Year:2000

is the seventh solo album by Susumu Hirasawa.

Overview

With his previous solo album Siren, Susumu Hirasawa felt that he perfected both the "simulated world music" concept that started on Sim City and his post-Aurora vocal style. He essentially stopped experimenting with his style in the late '90s because he felt that no new developments on that front would arise. Instead, he shifted his focus towards creating music for Interactive Live Shows.

Technique of Relief was, from the beginning, a concept album for an interactive live. It builds upon a broad "restoration of a perfect character" theme introduced in Scuba: while that album was about bringing scattered individuals back together into a group, Technique of Relief has the thoughts and experiences of many people combining into a neural network and becoming a single entity. The concept of "Green Nerve", which Hirasawa had played with in previous works, appears here as the character of a perfected human. The plot begins as the World Cell's breakdown causes the Green Nerve Network to cease functioning, and the Bridge Builder (Hirasawa) has to repair it.

Hirasawa rerecorded songs originally performed by Berserk actress Yūko Miyamura ("Moon Time" and "Mother") for the album. All the album's tracks weren't conceptualized and recorded holistically, but rather continually modified based on various phrases and flourishes he thought of on the fly.

On Technique of Relief, Hirasawa incorporated new sounds that he came in contact with into its style: tracks from a cassette tape of Indian music that a friend of his bought in the country were extensively sampled, 8 bit 22.050 kHz techno/jungle MOD files downloaded from a German site were used as drum parts for four songs ("Town-0 Phase-5", "The Man from Narcissus Space", "Strange Night of the Omnificience", "World Cell") and he applied elements from luk thung after seeing its popularity across all layers of Thai society.[1]

Technique of Relief is the last of Hirasawa's main discography to be recorded in Bangkok. Unlike previous occasions, he recorded electric guitar parts as well as vocal ones. Since he did not bring one of his trademark Talbo guitars to Thailand, he had to rent a Fender Stratocaster, whose sound he disliked.[2] [3] The album is also the first since Virtual Rabbit where Japanese guest musicians, both singers and instrumentalists, appear.

Personnel

additional performers
technical
visuals
operations
thanks

Release history

DateLabel(s)FormatCatalogNotes
Nippon Columbia, TeslakiteCDCOCP-30019
Columbia Music EntertainmentHQCDCOCP-35525Digitally remastered, with a soundtrack single for bonus tracks.
Digital Downloadnone
Chaos Union, TeslakiteCDCHTE-0060Remastered by Masanori Chinzei. Disc 7 of the HALDYN DOME box set.

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Interview 平沢進. Keyboard Magazine. Japanese. 10. Rittor Music. October 1998. 1344-6371.
  2. hrsw_kiji_bot. 平沢インタビュー記事bot. 771446826494898176. 1 September 2016. (レコーディング・日記より抜粋)タイではギターもイヤイヤ弾いた。しかも2曲。当然愛用のギター"タルボ"はないのでオーナーからレンタルしたのは黄色いSGとストライトキャスター。当然両方とも平沢さんには全然似合わない。('98).
  3. hrsw_kiji_bot. 平沢インタビュー記事bot. 789392608413954048. 21 October 2016. (TOWN-0 PHASE-5のギターはタルボではなくタイのスタジオにあったものだが差し替えようとは思わなかったのか)平沢「確かにストラトキャスターの音がしてイヤなんですけど、イヤなのは私だけで、タルボに差し替えたところで喜ぶ人はいない」('98).
  4. Akio Nirezaki. October 1998. 平沢進 INTERVIEW. KB Special. Japanese. 165. Rittor Music. 23–24.