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Japanese Breakfast

Music News

Japanese Breakfast expands 2018 tour to include dates with Belle & Sebastian

by the partae January 26, 2018
written by the partae

JAPANESE BREAKFAST EXPANDS 2018 TOUR TO INCLUDE DATES WITH BELLE & SEBASTIAN SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET  OUT NOW VIA DEAD OCEANS

Japanese Breakfast has expanded her 2018 tour to include support dates with Belle & Sebastian, stops at Coachella and Bonaroo, and new headlining dates through the summer that includes shows with Jay Som, Hand Habits, LVL UP, Radiator Hospital and Snail Mail.

Japanese Breakfast’s critically acclaimed album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is out now via Dead Oceans.

TOUR DATES:

2/15 – Seattle, WA @ Neumos ^ – SOLD OUT

2/16 – Vancouver, BC @ Biltmore ^ – SOLD OUT

2/17 – Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom (Sabertooth Festival) ^

2/19 – Reno, NV @ Holland Project ^

2/21 – San Jose, CA @ The Ritz

2/22 – San Francisco, CA @ Noise Pop (Gray Area Theater) – SOLD OUT

2/23 – Fresno, CA @ Strummer’s ^

2/24 – Pomona, CA @ The Glasshouse ^ – SOLD OUT

4/2 – Baltimore, MD @ Ottobar

4/3 – Durham, NC @ Motorco

4/4 – Athens, GA @ 40 Watt *

4/5 – Birmingham, AL @ Saturn *

4/6 – Orlando, FL @ The Abbey *

4/7 – Tampa, FL @ Crowbar *

4/9 – Houston, TX @ Walter’s

4/10 – Austin, TX @ The Scoot Inn *

4/11 – San Antonio, TX @ Paper Tiger *

4/13 – Tuscon, AZ @ 191 Toole *

4/15 – Indio, CA @ Coachella

4/18 – San Louis Obispo, CA @ SLO Brew *

4/22 – Indio, CA @ Coachella

4/23 – Flagstaff, AZ @ The Green Room *

4/24 – Santa Fe, NM @ Meow Wolf *

4/26 – Norman, OK @ Norman Music Festival

4/27 – Little Rock, AR @ Stickyz *

4/28 – Nashville, TN @ Exit / In *

4/29 – Columbus, OH @ Ace of Cups

5/30 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club + =

5/31 – Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw =

6/2 – Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair + =

6/3 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer + =

6/6 – Richmond, VA @ The Broadberry

6/7-10 – Manchester, TN @ Bonaroo

6/9 – Charlotte, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre

6/14 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Spirit

6/15 – Cincinnati, OH @ Taft Theatre Ballroom

6/16 – St Louis, MO @ The Ready Room

6/17 – Kansas City, MO @ The Record Bar

6/19 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theater ~

6/20 – Sundance, UT @ Sundance Amphitheater ~

6/22 – San Diego, CA @ The Observatory North Park ~

6/23 – Pomona, CA @ The Glass House

6/25 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater ~

6/28 – Vancouver, BC @ Vogue Theatre ~

6/29 – Vancouver, BC @ Vogue Theatre ~

6/30 – Portland, OR @ Oregon Zoo Amphitheater~

 

^ w/ Jay Som and Hand Habits

* w/ Snail Mail

+ w/ LVL UP

= w/ Radiator Hospital

~ w/ Belle & Sebastian

 

ABOUT JAPANESE BREAKFAST:

“The title Soft Sounds From Another Planet alludes to the promise of something that may or may not be there. Like a hope in something more. The songs are about human resilience and the strength it takes to claw out of the darkest of spaces.”

Michelle Zauner wrote the debut Japanese Breakfast album in the weeks after her mother died of cancer, thinking she would quit music entirely once it was done. That wasn’t the case. When Psychopomp was released to acclaim in 2016, she was forced to confront her grief. Zauner would find find herself reliving traumatic memories multiple times a day during interviews, trying to remain composed while discussing the most painful experience of her life. Her sophomore album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is a transmutation of mourning, a reflection that turns back on the cosmos in search of healing.

“I want to be a woman of regimen,” Zauner sings over a burbling synth on the album’s opening track “Diving Woman.” This serves as Zauner’s mission statement: stick to the routine lest you get derailed, don’t cling to the past, don’t descend. In fact, ascend to the stars; Zauner found artistic solace removed from Earth, in outer space and science fiction. “I used the theme as a means to disassociate from trauma,” she explains. “Space used as a place of fantasy.”

And yet, Soft Sounds From Another Planet isn’t a concept album. Over the course of 12 tracks, Zauner explores an expansive thematic universe, a cohesive outpouring of unlike parts structured to create a galaxy of her own design. In the instrumental “Planetary Ambience,” synths communicate the way extraterrestrials might, and on the shapeshifting single “Machinist,”  which Zauner has been performing live for over a year now, she details the sci-fi narrative of a woman falling in love with a machine. “It’s pure fiction,” she explains, “But it can map onto real relationships in a relevant way.” The track, which begins with spoken-word ambience, moves into autotune ’80s pop bliss and ends with a sultry saxophone solo, perfectly marries the experience: there’s a perceptible humanity in mechanical, bodily events.

Within its astral production, much of Soft Sounds From Another Planet stays grounded. “Road Head” is the last chest compression in attempt to resuscitate a doomed relationship, while the penultimate track “This House” is an acoustic dirge that honors Zauner’s chosen family. The baroque pop “Boyish” has a haunting, crystalline clarity that recalls the pathos of a Roy Orbison ballad, while “Body is a Blade” embraces the dark intimacy of Zauner’s Pacific Northwest heroes Elliott Smith and Mount Eerie.

With help from co-producer Craig Hendrix (who also co-produced Little Big League’s debut) and Jorge Elbrecht, (Ariel Pink, Tamaryn) who mixed the album, Zauner recontextualizes her bedroom pop beginnings, expanding and maturing her sound. The sheer massiveness of the big room production on Soft Sounds From Another Planet introduces listeners to a new Japanese Breakfast. Zauner’s familiar, capacious voice will serve as their guide.

“Your body is a blade that moves while your brain is writhing,” she sings. “Knuckled under pain you mourn but your blood is flowing.” There’s discernible pain in the phrasing, Zauner recognizing limitation, a lack of control, but then subverting the feeling, creating her own musical language for confronting trauma. Where Psychopomp introduced the world to Japanese Breakfast, Soft Soundsdives deeper. It builds space where there is none, and suggests that in the face of tragedy, we find ways to keep on living.

JAPANESE BREAKFAST SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET DEAD OCEANS JULY 14, 2017

BUY THE ALBUM=

  1. Diving Woman
  2. Road Head
  3. Machinist
  4. Planetary Ambience
  5. Soft Sounds From Another Planet
  6. Boyish
  7. 12 Steps
  8. Jimmy Fallon Big
  9. The Body Is A Blade
  10. Till Death
  11. This House
  12. Here Come The Tubular Bells

JAPANESE BREAKFAST

DEAD OCEANS

FOLLOW JAPANESE BREAKFAST ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM

Featured Photo Credit : Ebru Yildiz

 

January 26, 2018 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Music News

Japanese Breakfast expands 2018 tour, ‘Soft Sounds From Another Planet’ out now

by the partae December 5, 2017
written by the partae

JAPANESE BREAKFAST EXPANDS 2018 TOUR DATES WITH JAY SOM, SNAIL MAIL AND HAND HABITS SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET OUT NOW VIA DEAD OCEANS

Japanese Breakfast has expanded her 2018 tour to include headlining dates in April with Snail Mail, May and June in addition to a February run with Jay Som and Hand Habits.

Japanese Breakfast’s critically acclaimed album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is out now via Dead Oceans.

TOUR DATES:

2/15 – Seattle, WA @ Neumos ^

2/16 – Vancouver, BC @ Biltmore ^

2/17 – Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom (Sabertooth Festival) ^

2/19 – Reno, NV @ Holland Project ^

2/23 – Fresno, CA @ Strummer’s ^

2/24 – Pomona, CA @ The Glasshouse ^

4/2 – Baltimore, MD @ Ottobar

4/3 – Durham, NC @ Motorco

4/4 – Athens, GA @ 40 Watt *

4/5 – Birmingham, AL @ Saturn *

4/6 – Orlando, FL @ Will’s Pub *

4/7 – Tampa, FL @ Crowbar *

4/9 – Houston, TX @ Walter’s

4/10 – Austin, TX @ The Scoot Inn *

4/11 – San Antonio, TX @ Paper Tiger *

4/24 – Santa Fe, NM @ Meow Wolf *

4/26 – Norman, OK @ Norman Music Festival

4/27 – Little Rock, AR @ Stickyz *

4/28 – Nashville, TN @ Exit / In *

4/29 – Columbus, OH @ Ace of Cups

5/30 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club

5/31 – Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw

6/2 – Cambridge, MA @ Sinclair

6/3 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer

 

^ w/ Jay Som and Hand Habits

* w/ Snail Mail

 

WATCH “THE BODY IS A BLADE” VIDEO

ABOUT JAPANESE BREAKFAST:

“The title Soft Sounds From Another Planet alludes to the promise of something that may or may not be there. Like a hope in something more. The songs are about human resilience and the strength it takes to claw out of the darkest of spaces.”

Michelle Zauner wrote the debut Japanese Breakfast album in the weeks after her mother died of cancer, thinking she would quit music entirely once it was done. That wasn’t the case. When Psychopomp was released to acclaim in 2016, she was forced to confront her grief. Zauner would find find herself reliving traumatic memories multiple times a day during interviews, trying to remain composed while discussing the most painful experience of her life. Her sophomore album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is a transmutation of mourning, a reflection that turns back on the cosmos in search of healing.

“I want to be a woman of regimen,” Zauner sings over a burbling synth on the album’s opening track “Diving Woman.” This serves as Zauner’s mission statement: stick to the routine lest you get derailed, don’t cling to the past, don’t descend. In fact, ascend to the stars; Zauner found artistic solace removed from Earth, in outer space and science fiction. “I used the theme as a means to disassociate from trauma,” she explains. “Space used as a place of fantasy.”

And yet, Soft Sounds From Another Planet isn’t a concept album. Over the course of 12 tracks, Zauner explores an expansive thematic universe, a cohesive outpouring of unlike parts structured to create a galaxy of her own design. In the instrumental “Planetary Ambience,” synths communicate the way extraterrestrials might, and on the shapeshifting single “Machinist,”  which Zauner has been performing live for over a year now, she details the sci-fi narrative of a woman falling in love with a machine. “It’s pure fiction,” she explains, “But it can map onto real relationships in a relevant way.” The track, which begins with spoken-word ambience, moves into autotune ’80s pop bliss and ends with a sultry saxophone solo, perfectly marries the experience: there’s a perceptible humanity in mechanical, bodily events.

Within its astral production, much of Soft Sounds From Another Planet stays grounded. “Road Head” is the last chest compression in attempt to resuscitate a doomed relationship, while the penultimate track “This House” is an acoustic dirge that honors Zauner’s chosen family. The baroque pop “Boyish” has a haunting, crystalline clarity that recalls the pathos of a Roy Orbison ballad, while “Body is a Blade” embraces the dark intimacy of Zauner’s Pacific Northwest heroes Elliott Smith and Mount Eerie.

With help from co-producer Craig Hendrix (who also co-produced Little Big League’s debut) and Jorge Elbrecht, (Ariel Pink, Tamaryn) who mixed the album, Zauner recontextualizes her bedroom pop beginnings, expanding and maturing her sound. The sheer massiveness of the big room production on Soft Sounds From Another Planet introduces listeners to a new Japanese Breakfast. Zauner’s familiar, capacious voice will serve as their guide.

“Your body is a blade that moves while your brain is writhing,” she sings. “Knuckled under pain you mourn but your blood is flowing.” There’s discernible pain in the phrasing, Zauner recognizing limitation, a lack of control, but then subverting the feeling, creating her own musical language for confronting trauma. Where Psychopomp introduced the world to Japanese Breakfast, Soft Soundsdives deeper. It builds space where there is none, and suggests that in the face of tragedy, we find ways to keep on living.

JAPANESE BREAKFAST SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET DEAD OCEANS JULY 14, 2017

BUY THE ALBUM

  1. Diving Woman
  2. Road Head
  3. Machinist
  4. Planetary Ambience
  5. Soft Sounds From Another Planet
  6. Boyish
  7. 12 Steps
  8. Jimmy Fallon Big
  9. The Body Is A Blade
  10. Till Death
  11. This House
  12. Here Come The Tubular Bells

 

JAPANESE BREAKFAST 

DEAD OCEANS

 

FOLLOW JAPANESE BREAKFAST ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM

Featured Photo Credit : Ebru Yildiz

 

 

December 5, 2017 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Music News

Japanese Breakfast Shares Video For “The Body Is A Blade”; playing debut Australian shows in December

by the partae October 23, 2017
written by the partae

JAPANESE BREAKFAST SHARES VIDEO FOR “THE BODY IS A BLADE”

Playing debut Australian shows in December

Soft Sounds From Another Planet out now on Dead Oceans via Inertia Music

Japanese Breakfast has shared a beautiful video for “The Body Is A Blade“, taken from the critically acclaimed album Soft Sounds From Another Planet, which is out now on Dead Oceans via Inertia Music.

The video sees Michelle Zauner on director’s duty again, with frequent collaborator Adam Kolodny as the cinematographer. Zauner states that she sought inspiration for this video by searching through old photographs in her family home; “I’ve always loved the way old photographs look. For this video I spent a lot of time searching family albums for sets of old photographs to animate.”

We get a peek behind the veil of Japanese Breakfast’s already personal music in a visceral and affecting way; single camera shots of Zauner are juxtaposed by beautiful and poignant old family photographs of her parents and especially her mother.

“I wanted this video to commemorate my mother who died three years ago today”, she continues, “It felt fitting for the song to create a really personal mixed media piece, almost like a moving scrapbook.’’

Japanese Breakfast will play her debut Australian shows this year, including stops at Meredith Music Festival, Fairgrounds Festival and a headline show in Melbourne. Details below.

JAPANESE BREAKFAST
AUSTRALIAN TOUR DATES

Friday December 8 | Fairgrounds Festival, Berry NSW
Saturday December 9 | The Curtin, Melbourne VIC
Sunday December 10 | Meredith Music Festival, Meredith VIC

More Info

Japanese Breakfast
Soft Sounds From Another Planet

1. Diving Woman
2. Road Head
3. Machinist
4. Planetary Ambience
5. Soft Sounds From Another Planet
6. Boyish
7. 12 Steps
8. Jimmy Fallon Big
9. Body Is A Blade
10. Till Death
11. This House
12. Here Come The Tubular Bells

Soft Sounds From Another Planet by Japanese Breakfast is out now on Dead Oceans via Inertia Music
Get it here: 
https://Inertia.lnk.to/SoftSounds

www.japanesebreakfast.rocks
www.facebook.com/japanesebreakfast

www.twitter.com/Jbrekkie
www.instagram.com/jbrekkie

Featured Photo Credit :  Ebru Yildiz

 

October 23, 2017 0 comment
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Music News

Japanese Breakfast releases “The Body Is A Blade” music video, announces tour dates with Jay Som

by the partae October 19, 2017
written by the partae
JAPANESE BREAKFAST RELEASES  “THE BODY IS A BLADE” VIDEO ANNOUNCES TOUR DATES WITH JAY SOM AND HAND HABITS SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET  OUT NOW VIA DEAD OCEANS

Today, Japanese Breakfast has released a music video for “The Body Is A Blade,” taken from the critically acclaimed album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, out now on Dead Oceans.

The video sees Michelle Zauner on director’s duty again, with frequent collaborator Adam Kolodny as the cinematographer. Zauner states that she sought inspiration for this video by searching through old photographs in her family home; “I’ve always loved the way old photographs look. For this video I spent a lot of time searching family albums for sets of old photographs to animate.”

We get a peek behind the veil of Japanese Breakfast’s already personal music in a visceral and affecting way; single camera shots of Zauner are juxtaposed by beautiful and poignant old family photographs of her parents and especially her mother.

“I wanted this video to commemorate my mother who died three years ago today”, she continues, “It felt fitting for the song to create a really personal mixed media piece, almost like a moving scrapbook.”

Japanese Breakfast has also announced 2018 tour dates with Jay Som and Hand Habits. All dates below.

TOUR DATES:

10/21 – Bristol, GB @ Simple Things Festival

10/23 – Cologne, DE @ Blue Shell

10/24 – Hamburg, DE @ Hakken

10/25 – Berlin, DE @ Badenhouse

10/26 – Paris, FR @ Pop Up Du Label

10/27 – Gent, BE @ NEST

10/28 – Amsterdam, NL @ London Calling

11/2 – Brighton, GB @ The Joker *SOLD OUT*

11/3 – Manchester, GB @ Soup Kitchen *SOLD OUT*

11/4 – Edinburgh, GB @ The Mash House

11/5 – Glasgow, GB @ The Hug and Pint

11/6 – Leeds, GB @ Headrow House

11/7 – London, GB @ The Dome Tufnell Park *SOLD OUT*

2/15 – Seattle, WA @ Neumos ^

2/16 – Vancouver, BC @ Biltmore ^

2/17 – Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom (Sabertooth Festival) ^

2/19 – Reno, NV @ Holland Project ^

2/23 – Fresno, CA @ Strummer’s ^

2/24 – Pomona, CA @ The Glasshouse ^

^ w/ Jay Som and Hand Habits

ABOUT JAPANESE BREAKFAST:

“The title Soft Sounds From Another Planet alludes to the promise of something that may or may not be there. Like a hope in something more. The songs are about human resilience and the strength it takes to claw out of the darkest of spaces.”

Michelle Zauner wrote the debut Japanese Breakfast album in the weeks after her mother died of cancer, thinking she would quit music entirely once it was done. That wasn’t the case. When Psychopomp was released to acclaim in 2016, she was forced to confront her grief. Zauner would find find herself reliving traumatic memories multiple times a day during interviews, trying to remain composed while discussing the most painful experience of her life. Her sophomore album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is a transmutation of mourning, a reflection that turns back on the cosmos in search of healing.

“I want to be a woman of regimen,” Zauner sings over a burbling synth on the album’s opening track “Diving Woman.” This serves as Zauner’s mission statement: stick to the routine lest you get derailed, don’t cling to the past, don’t descend. In fact, ascend to the stars; Zauner found artistic solace removed from Earth, in outer space and science fiction. “I used the theme as a means to disassociate from trauma,” she explains. “Space used as a place of fantasy.”

And yet, Soft Sounds From Another Planet isn’t a concept album. Over the course of 12 tracks, Zauner explores an expansive thematic universe, a cohesive outpouring of unlike parts structured to create a galaxy of her own design. In the instrumental “Planetary Ambience,” synths communicate the way extraterrestrials might, and on the shapeshifting single “Machinist,”  which Zauner has been performing live for over a year now, she details the sci-fi narrative of a woman falling in love with a machine. “It’s pure fiction,” she explains, “But it can map onto real relationships in a relevant way.” The track, which begins with spoken-word ambience, moves into autotune ’80s pop bliss and ends with a sultry saxophone solo, perfectly marries the experience: there’s a perceptible humanity in mechanical, bodily events.

Within its astral production, much of Soft Sounds From Another Planet stays grounded. “Road Head” is the last chest compression in attempt to resuscitate a doomed relationship, while the penultimate track “This House” is an acoustic dirge that honors Zauner’s chosen family. The baroque pop “Boyish” has a haunting, crystalline clarity that recalls the pathos of a Roy Orbison ballad, while “Body is a Blade” embraces the dark intimacy of Zauner’s Pacific Northwest heroes Elliott Smith and Mount Eerie.

With help from co-producer Craig Hendrix (who also co-produced Little Big League’s debut) and Jorge Elbrecht, (Ariel Pink, Tamaryn) who mixed the album, Zauner recontextualizes her bedroom pop beginnings, expanding and maturing her sound. The sheer massiveness of the big room production on Soft Sounds From Another Planet introduces listeners to a new Japanese Breakfast. Zauner’s familiar, capacious voice will serve as their guide.

“Your body is a blade that moves while your brain is writhing,” she sings. “Knuckled under pain you mourn but your blood is flowing.” There’s discernible pain in the phrasing, Zauner recognizing limitation, a lack of control, but then subverting the feeling, creating her own musical language for confronting trauma. Where Psychopomp introduced the world to Japanese Breakfast, Soft Soundsdives deeper. It builds space where there is none, and suggests that in the face of tragedy, we find ways to keep on living.

JAPANESE BREAKFAST

SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET DEAD OCEANS

JULY 14, 2017

BUY THE ALBUM

  1. Diving Woman
  2. Road Head
  3. Machinist
  4. Planetary Ambience
  5. Soft Sounds From Another Planet
  6. Boyish
  7. 12 Steps
  8. Jimmy Fallon Big
  9. The Body Is A Blade
  10. Till Death
  11. This House
  12. Here Come The Tubular Bells

JAPANESE BREAKFAST

DEAD OCEANS

FOLLOW JAPANESE BREAKFAST ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM

 

October 19, 2017 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Music News

Japanese Breakfast releases Japanese Breakquest, a RPG browser video game – THE PARTAE

by the partae September 16, 2017
written by the partae
JAPANESE BREAKFAST RELEASES JAPANESE BREAKQUEST AN RPG BROWSER GAME  FEATURING MIDI VERSIONS OF SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET

Today, Japanese Breakfast’s Michelle Zauner has released a RPG browser game titled Japanese Breakquest. The video game, which Zauner designed with Elaine Fath, features midi versions of all the songs from Japanese Breakfast’s critically acclaimed new album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, out now via Dead Oceans. The songs play from room to room and are available in full for download if you beat the game.

Zauner detailed the video game in conversations with Billboard and Polygon.

Set in space, the goal of the game is to collect pieces of the Machinist robot to help you defeat aliens trying to take over your ship. You can equip band merchandise and instruments, like a (Sandy) Alex G T shirt, or Frankie Cosmos’ Dan Electro to raise your characters’ stats and learn abilities like “Philly Indie Cred” and “Rip a Solo” to conquer your enemies

PLAY JAPANESE BREAKQUEST

ABOUT JAPANESE BREAKFAST:

“The title Soft Sounds From Another Planet alludes to the promise of something that may or may not be there. Like a hope in something more. The songs are about human resilience and the strength it takes to claw out of the darkest of spaces.”

Michelle Zauner wrote the debut Japanese Breakfast album in the weeks after her mother died of cancer, thinking she would quit music entirely once it was done. That wasn’t the case. When Psychopomp was released to acclaim in 2016, she was forced to confront her grief. Zauner would find find herself reliving traumatic memories multiple times a day during interviews, trying to remain composed while discussing the most painful experience of her life. Her sophomore album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is a transmutation of mourning, a reflection that turns back on the cosmos in search of healing.

“I want to be a woman of regimen,” Zauner sings over a burbling synth on the album’s opening track “Diving Woman.” This serves as Zauner’s mission statement: stick to the routine lest you get derailed, don’t cling to the past, don’t descend. In fact, ascend to the stars; Zauner found artistic solace removed from Earth, in outer space and science fiction. “I used the theme as a means to disassociate from trauma,” she explains. “Space used as a place of fantasy.”

And yet, Soft Sounds From Another Planet isn’t a concept album. Over the course of 12 tracks, Zauner explores an expansive thematic universe, a cohesive outpouring of unlike parts structured to create a galaxy of her own design. In the instrumental “Planetary Ambience,” synths communicate the way extraterrestrials might, and on the shapeshifting single “Machinist,”  which Zauner has been performing live for over a year now, she details the sci-fi narrative of a woman falling in love with a machine. “It’s pure fiction,” she explains, “But it can map onto real relationships in a relevant way.” The track, which begins with spoken-word ambience, moves into autotune ’80s pop bliss and ends with a sultry saxophone solo, perfectly marries the experience: there’s a perceptible humanity in mechanical, bodily events.

Within its astral production, much of Soft Sounds From Another Planet stays grounded. “Road Head” is the last chest compression in attempt to resuscitate a doomed relationship, while the penultimate track “This House” is an acoustic dirge that honors Zauner’s chosen family. The baroque pop “Boyish” has a haunting, crystalline clarity that recalls the pathos of a Roy Orbison ballad, while “Body is a Blade” embraces the dark intimacy of Zauner’s Pacific Northwest heroes Elliott Smith and Mount Eerie.

With help from co-producer Craig Hendrix (who also co-produced Little Big League’s debut) and Jorge Elbrecht, (Ariel Pink, Tamaryn) who mixed the album, Zauner recontextualizes her bedroom pop beginnings, expanding and maturing her sound. The sheer massiveness of the big room production on Soft Sounds From Another Planet introduces listeners to a new Japanese Breakfast. Zauner’s familiar, capacious voice will serve as their guide.

“Your body is a blade that moves while your brain is writhing,” she sings. “Knuckled under pain you mourn but your blood is flowing.” There’s discernible pain in the phrasing, Zauner recognizing limitation, a lack of control, but then subverting the feeling, creating her own musical language for confronting trauma. Where Psychopomp introduced the world to Japanese Breakfast, Soft Soundsdives deeper. It builds space where there is none, and suggests that in the face of tragedy, we find ways to keep on living.

TOUR DATES:

9/14 – Houston, TX @ Walter’s +

9/15 – Austin, TX @ Barracuda +

9/16 – Dallas, TX @ RBC +

9/18 – Phoenix, AZ @ Valley Bar +

9/20 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Echo +

9/21 – San Francisco, CA @ Swedish American Hall +

9/22 – Oakland, CA @ Starline Social Club +

9/23 – Eugene, OR @ HiFi +

9/25 – Portland, OR @ Holocene +

9/26 – Vancouver, BC @ Fox Cabaret +

9/27 – Seattle, WA @ Crocodile +

9/28 – Boise, ID @ Neurolux +

9/29 – Salt Lake City @ Kilby Court +

9/30 – Denver, CO @ Larimer Lounge +

10/2 – Minneapolis, MN @ The Triple Rock +

10/4 – Chicago, IL @ Subterranean +

10/5 – Bloomington, IN @ The Bishop +

10/6 – Detroit, MI @ UFO Factory +

10/7 – Toronto, ON @ The Garisson +

10/8 – Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz PDB +

10/11 – Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair +

10/12 – Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg +

10/21 – Bristol, GB @ Simple Things Festival

10/23 – Cologne, DE @ Blue Shell

10/24 – Hamburg, DE @ Hakken

10/25 – Berlin, DE @ Badenhouse

10/26 – Paris, FR @ Pop Up Du Label

10/27 – Gent, BE @ NEST

10/28 – Amsterdam, NL @ London Calling

11/2 – Brighton, GB @ The Joker

11/3 – Manchester, GB @ Soup Kitchen

11/4 – Edinburgh, GB @ The Mash House

11/5 – Glasgow, GB @ The Hug and Pint

11/6 – Leeds, GB @ Headrow House

11/7 – London, GB @ The Dome Tufnell Park

+ w/ Mannequin Pussy & Spirit of the Beehive

JAPANESE BREAKFAST

SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET

DEAD OCEANS

JULY 14, 2017

BUY THE ALBUM

  1. Diving Woman
  2. Road Head
  3. Machinist
  4. Planetary Ambience
  5. Soft Sounds From Another Planet
  6. Boyish
  7. 12 Steps
  8. Jimmy Fallon Big
  9. Body Is A Blade
  10. Till Death
  11. This House
  12. Here Come The Tubular Bells

JAPANESE BREAKFAST

DEAD OCEANS

FOLLOW JAPANESE BREAKFAST ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM

THE PARTAE

September 16, 2017 0 comment
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Music News

JAPANESE BREAKFAST RELEASES VIDEO FOR ‘ROAD HEAD’

by the partae July 7, 2017
written by the partae

Soft Sounds From Another Planet out July 14 on Dead Oceans via Inertia Music

“Another great Japanese Breakfast album in the style of Psychopomp
would’ve been a gift, but this is something better. It’s proof that we’re
only beginning to glimpse Zauner’s capacity for evolution.”

Pitchfork 

“Mines the dark drama of Vangelis and the melancholic fall-out from
Kanye West’s 808s & Heartbreak.”

NPR

“Critics everywhere best start making room on their Best of 2017 lists…
Machinist’ is proof that Zauner is growing and changing in an
adventurous, unafraid way. Even the sky isn’t the limit.”

Paste Magazine

Today, Japanese Breakfast has shared a music video for “Road Head“, the latest from Soft Sounds From Another Planet, the much anticipated follow up to the critically acclaimed Psychopomp. Of the video, Michelle Zauner says: “‘Road Head’ is the fifth music video Adam Kolodny and I have collaborated on. For this one we wanted to focus on staging and an exaggerated colour palette. We were inspired by ‘Fallen Angels‘ and ‘Twin Peaks‘.“

Soft Sounds From Another Planet is a work of self-reflection that looks out at the cosmos in search of healing, finding inspiration in science fiction, outer space, and the Mars One Project. The album is available for pre-order now and due out next Friday July 14 on Dead Oceans via Inertia Music.

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July 7, 2017 0 comment
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Music News

JAPANESE BREAKFAST SHARES NEW SINGLE “BOYISH”

by the partae June 8, 2017
written by the partae
ON TOUR NOW
SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET
OUT 7/14 VIA DEAD OCEANS
LISTEN TO “BOYISH“
(CLEARED TO POST & SHARE)
Today, Japanese Breakfast has shared “Boyish,” the latest from her upcoming album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet. Of the song, Michelle Zauner says “Craig Hendrix [band member and the album’s co-producer] and I wanted to produce this sort of grandiose Roy Orbison-esque ballad. We wanted the chorus to have big arrangements, lots of harmonies and synth strings, to create a really sweeping, melancholic effect that mirrored the nature of the lyrics. The song is about jealousy and sexual incompetence. It’s about feeling ugly.”
The follow up to Japanese Breakfast’s critically acclaimed debut is a work of self-reflection that looks out at the cosmos in search of healing, finding inspiration in science fiction, outer space, and the Mars One Project. Soft Sounds From Another Planet is available for pre-order now and due out July 14th on Dead Oceans.
Japanese Breakfast has also announced a free record release show matinee at Brooklyn, NY’s Union Pool on July 15th and some dates in Europe. The band is currently on tour with (Sandy) Alex G and Cende and have some upcoming US dates with Tegan and Sara. All dates below.
WATCH THE “MACHINIST” VIDEO

PRAISE FOR SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET:
“Another great Japanese Breakfast album in the style of Psychopomp would’ve been a gift, but this is something better. It’s proof that we’re only beginning to glimpse Zauner’s capacity for evolution.” –Pitchfork
“Mines the dark drama of Vangelis and the melancholic fall-out from Kanye West’s 808s & Heartbreak.” –NPR
“Critics everywhere best start making room on their Best of 2017 lists… ‘Machinist’ is proof that Zauner is growing and changing in an adventurous, unafraid way. Even the sky isn’t the limit.” –Paste Magazine
 
TOUR DATES:
6/7 – Orlando, FL @ The Social *
6/9 – Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall *
6/10 – Austin, TX @ The Parish *
6/11 – Dallas, TX @ Club Dada *
6/13 – Phoenix, AZ @ The Rebel Lounge *
6/15 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Echoplex *
6/16 – San Diego, CA @ The Irenic *
6/17 – Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room *
6/18 – San Francisco, CA @ The Chapel *
6/20 – Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile *
6/21 – Vancouver, BC @ The Cobalt *
6/22 – Portland, OR @ Holocene *
6/24 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court *
6/25 – Denver, CO @ Larimer Lounge *
6/27 – Minneapolis, MN @ 7th St Entry *
6/28 – Chicago, IL @ Bottom Lounge *
6/29 – Columbus, OH @ Double Happiness *
6/30 – Lakewood, OH @ Mahall’s *
7/1 – Detroit, MI @ El Club *
7/2 – Toronto, ON @ Velvet Underground *
7/4 – Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz PDB *
7/5 – Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair *
7/6 – Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg *
7/7 – New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom *
7/8 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer *
7/15 – Brooklyn, NY @ Union Pool ~
7/27 – Halifax, NS @ Rebecca Cohn Auditorium ^
7/28 – Portland, ME @ State Theatre ^
7/29 – Buffalo, NY @ Town Ballroom ^
7/31 – Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues ^
8/2 – Covington, KY @ Madison Theater ^
10/23 – Cologne, DE @ Blue Shell
10/25 – Berlin, DE @ Badenhouse
11/2 – Brighton, GB @ The Joker
11/6 – Leeds, GB @ Headrow House
11/7 – London, GB @ The Dome Tufnell Park
* w/ (Sandy) Alex G & Cende
^ w/ Tegan & Sara
~ Free Record Release Show w/ Yohuna (Starts at 2PM)
ABOUT JAPANESE BREAKFAST: 
“The title Soft Sounds From Another Planet alludes to the promise of something that may or may not be there. Like a hope in something more. The songs are about human resilience and the strength it takes to claw out of the darkest of spaces.”
Michelle Zauner wrote the debut Japanese Breakfast album in the weeks after her mother died of cancer, thinking she would quit music entirely once it was done. That wasn’t the case. When Psychopomp was released to acclaim in 2016, she was forced to confront her grief. Zauner would find find herself reliving traumatic memories multiple times a day during interviews, trying to remain composed while discussing the most painful experience of her life. Her sophomore album, Soft Sounds From Another Planet, is a transmutation of mourning, a reflection that turns back on the cosmos in search of healing.
“I want to be a woman of regimen,” Zauner sings over a burbling synth on the album’s opening track “Diving Woman.” This serves as Zauner’s mission statement: stick to the routine lest you get derailed, don’t cling to the past, don’t descend. In fact, ascend to the stars; Zauner found artistic solace removed from Earth, in outer space and science fiction. “I used the theme as a means to disassociate from trauma,” she explains. “Space used as a place of fantasy.”
And yet, Soft Sounds From Another Planet isn’t a concept album. Over the course of 12 tracks, Zauner explores an expansive thematic universe, a cohesive outpouring of unlike parts structured to create a galaxy of her own design. In the instrumental “Planetary Ambience,” synths communicate the way extraterrestrials might, and on the shapeshifting single “Machinist,”  which Zauner has been performing live for over a year now, she details the sci-fi narrative of a woman falling in love with a machine. “It’s pure fiction,” she explains, “But it can map onto real relationships in a relevant way.” The track, which begins with spoken-word ambience, moves into autotune ’80s pop bliss and ends with a sultry saxophone solo, perfectly marries the experience: there’s a perceptible humanity in mechanical, bodily events.
Within its astral production, much of Soft Sounds From Another Planet stays grounded. “Road Head” is the last chest compression in attempt to resuscitate a doomed relationship, while the penultimate track “This House” is an acoustic dirge that honors Zauner’s chosen family. The baroque pop “Boyish” has a haunting, crystalline clarity that recalls the pathos of a Roy Orbison ballad, while “Body is a Blade” embraces the dark intimacy of Zauner’s Pacific Northwest heroes Elliott Smith and Mount Eerie.
With help from co-producer Craig Hendrix (who also co-produced Little Big League’s debut) and Jorge Elbrecht, (Ariel Pink, Tamaryn) who mixed the album, Zauner recontextualizes her bedroom pop beginnings, expanding and maturing her sound. The sheer massiveness of the big room production on Soft Sounds From Another Planet introduces listeners to a new Japanese Breakfast. Zauner’s familiar, capacious voice will serve as their guide.
“Your body is a blade that moves while your brain is writhing,” she sings. “Knuckled under pain you mourn but your blood is flowing.” There’s discernible pain in the phrasing, Zauner recognizing limitation, a lack of control, but then subverting the feeling, creating her own musical language for confronting trauma. Where Psychopomp introduced the world to Japanese Breakfast, Soft Sounds dives deeper. It builds space where there is none, and suggests that in the face of tragedy, we find ways to keep on living.
JAPANESE BREAKFAST
SOFT SOUNDS FROM ANOTHER PLANET
DEAD OCEANS
JULY 14, 2017
PRE-ORDER THE ALBUM
 
1. Diving Woman
2. Road Head
3. Machinist
4. Planetary Ambience
5. Soft Sounds From Another Planet
6. Boyish
7. 12 Steps
8. Jimmy Fallon Big
9. Body Is A Blade
10. Till Death
11. This House
12. Here Come The Tubular Bells
JAPANESE BREAKFAST
DEAD OCEANS
FOLLOW JAPANESE BREAKFAST ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM
June 8, 2017 0 comment
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