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Patrick St. Michel
Patrick St. Michel is a Tokyo-based writer with a focus on Japanese music. He runs the blog Make Believe Melodies, which has focused on Japanese independent music since 2009. Besides The Japan Times, he also contributes to MTV 81 and The Atlantic.
For Patrick St. Michel's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Jul 7, 2011
andymori "Kakumei"
Now three albums deep into their career, indie-poppers andymori still lean on youthful energy to carry their music instead of songwriting smarts. That's not necessarily a bad thing, as "Kakumei" ("Revolution") features a handful of energetic pop numbers that know how to leave an impression without lingering around in your head too long. Yet the trio's best moments on this release take up less than half of "Kakumei's" already anemic 29-minute runtime, the rest of which is filled up by ho-hum attempts at J-rock and meandering slow numbers.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Jun 23, 2011
Bedroom ears: Japan's new D.I.Y. ethic
The dimly lit Bar Fabrica is an appropriate place to meet the four artists from Cuz Me Pain Records, who describe their music as "quite dark" and are known for being shrouded in mystery.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Jun 9, 2011
Caroline
In another time, Caroline Lufkin could easily have ended up as a chart-topping J-pop star. After graduating from Boston's Berklee School Of Music, the Okinawa-born artist moved to Tokyo, where she began working on her first album. Her management at the time wanted Lufkin (who performs simply as Caroline) to go down the same road her big sister Olivia Lufkin did. Her path to the Oricon charts was being paved right in front of her.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
May 26, 2011
Gellers find a new balance with 'Guatemala'
The story behind Gellers seems like the stuff of made-for-TV movies. A bunch of kids meet one another on the outskirts of the city, and eventually form a band. They stick together and, despite a few setbacks, release an album and tour the country as adults. There are no scripts to be found here, though.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
May 19, 2011
MacDonald Duck Eclair "Kono Tokimeki Ima Sugu"
"Kono Tokimeki Ima Sugu" (which translates loosely as "This fluttering of my heart, now") serves as a bit of a homecoming for hyper-speed pop trio MacDonald Duck Eclair. Their third album and first in five years comes out on K.O.G.A. Records, the label responsible for releasing the band's debut single in 1999. Despite this full-circle move, MacDonald Duck Eclair's latest finds them sounding virtually the same as they did when they started at K.O.G.A. "Ima Sugu" flirts with poppier structure, but does so without forfeiting the breakneck pace established on earlier releases.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
May 19, 2011
Online Maltine learns old-school tricks
Tomohiro Konuta didn't have lofty ambitions when he and his friend Syem started the online music label Maltine Records in 2005. They were just two teenagers looking for a little attention.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
May 5, 2011
Oorutaichi
Osaka artist Oorutaichi has long tried to test listeners' ears by blending together many disparate styles, so much so as to render the concept of "genre" irrelevant when discussing his music. For an upcoming concert in Tokyo he hopes to further challenge the sensory experience through the addition of celluloid.

Longform

When trying to trace your lineage in Japan, the "koseki" is the most important form of document you'll encounter.
Climbing the branches of a Japanese family tree