Yumiko Morioka – Resonance, 1986

Guest post by Matt Nida (London)

Sometimes the music tells its own story. I bought Yumiko Morioka’s Resonance last year in Tokyo (on the recommendation of someone who knew I’d been devouring records by the likes of Hiroshi Yoshimura, Toshifumi Hinata, Haruomi Hosono and many other names who’ll be familiar to readers of this blog) knowing nothing more than what my ears were telling me – that this was a very beautiful slow-burning piano album; Satie-esque ripples through a tranquil sea of crystalline digital reverb, equal parts Sakamoto, Budd, and the Eno brothers. I fell in love with this album on its own terms, with no real sense of how it fits into the wider story of 1980s Japanese ambient music.

As someone who can neither speak nor read Japanese, piecing together the background of this album is its own adventure, relying a lot on shaky auto-translate services and reasonably intelligent guesswork. Yumiko Morioka was born in 1956, and studied at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. She spent much of the last three decades in the United States; Resonance is her only solo release, although she later released a collaborative album with Bill Nelson called Culturemix in 1995. Under the pen name of Satoshi Miyashita, she wrote a number of hit songs for idol acts throughout the 80’s including Toshihiko Tahara and other performers from the notorious Johnny & Associates stable.

Dig further into Resonance’s credits and associates and some familiar names start to appear. The album was produced by new age keyboardist Akira Ito, formerly of the Far East Family Band, and was the only LP released on Ito’s Green & Water label that wasn’t one of his own efforts. Morioka herself occasionally played piano for Miharu Koshi, and receives a “special thanks” credit in the liner notes to Hosono’s Omni Sight Seeing.

So it’s tempting to view Resonance primarily as another link in the dense latticework of interconnecting artists and albums from 70s and 80s Japan that enthusiastic Western listeners are only now starting to piece together through blog posts, YouTube algorithms and curatorial mixes. Another piece in the puzzle. But you really don’t need to know any of this stuff. Resonance really is nothing more than a very beautiful slow-burning piano album, one whose exploratory pieces gently unfold in a way that slows time and, in the best Eno tradition, pleasantly colour any environment in which they’re heard. It’s an honest, open record, and one that I hope you will love as much as I do.

12 thoughts on “Yumiko Morioka – Resonance, 1986”

  1. Far East Family Band illustrates how the mind expanding philiosophy of the psych era continued
    proud and strong in both Japan and Germany during the 70s. Wonder why-and how,commercially?

    1. David Stubbs’ terrific book on krautrock very persuasively makes the case that the strong counter-cultural movements in Germany during the 60s and 70s came from a generation that was keen to establish a clean break from their parents’ generation and the associated taint of World War II. My understanding is that a similar thing happened in Japan, but I’m a bit shaky on the details and wouldn’t want to generalise. My understanding is that Julian Cope’s Japrocksampler is essentially about this, but I’ve not actually read it yet (feel I need to work myself up to tackling that amount of Cope prose!).

  2. Merci énormément pour cet album.
    Thank you for pointing your finger on what has to be seen.

  3. WOW! It’s so nice to know that somebody appreciates my music.
    I made this album more than 30 years ago. And I was just talking to someone from the label in Belgium, that it might be reissued next year in LP. Matt, thank you so much for writing about my music. It really made my day!!!

    1. Yumiko, I do hope that your album is released on LP again, this album has helped me through difficult times.
      These are beautiful pieces of music that have enriched my life and the beautiful countryside and woods.
      Come and play in London one day

  4. Amazing album indeed !
    The song “La Sylphide – 空気の精 -” is a masterpiece ! And “Ever Green” is so precious.
    Thank you so much for this discovery and THANK YOU Yumiko Morioka.
    Now I must search my local dealers to see if I can find your album otherwise…Amazon…

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