Ichika Nito
The Moon’s Elbow


1.5
very poor

Review

by Simon K. STAFF
January 31st, 2026 | 28 replies


Release Date: 01/30/2026 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Likely to be my biggest disappointment of 2026.

As a musician myself, what I’m about to talk about is something I often wrestle with, and I’m sure it’s something many other musicians have thought about at one time or another. Anyone who’s read a review of mine regarding a virtuoso solo artist will know; I’m not looking for 30 minutes of blistering finger gymnastics – I’m looking for a record that showcases those incredible abilities and translates them into great songs. Unfortunately, from experience, you’d be surprised how hard that is to pull off for some of these unbelievable players, getting lost in their own self-indulgence and having the music become ostentatious and shallow. It’s the type of sound where there’s a lot going on but you’re getting no value out of what you’re hearing. For me music with feeling, mood, or lateral thinking will always supersede proficiency, and fundamentally what I mean by that is, when I connect with music it’s because there’s, generally, tangible substance behind what I’m hearing. There could be a song I hear which only plays one note, but if that note is played with unrelenting zeal, or is executed with an unorthodox approach that makes it engaging to listen to, then that’s all that matters.

Personally, it’s about how you arrange and approach those notes, and as a musician and songwriter myself with a limited skillset – in that I couldn’t fathom the kind of stuff Ichika Nito can play – I occasionally ponder over whether I would want that level of talent, and if I did, how would I approach writing music knowing I had an omnipotent well of sounds to draw from. With me being all too aware of my limitations as a player, I compensate by trying to think outside of the box, doing things which might be considered a little unconventional. And in a way, I guess I feel a sense of gratitude for those technical restrictions and the hardships that come with it, because it makes me really dig hard to find stuff that sounds good to me. It’s raw, a little flawed, off-kilter, and ugly at times, but that human element is at the forefront – an element I strive to discover when listening to new music.

So, how do my internal ramblings fall into Ichika Nito’s highly anticipated debut album? Well, this is a guy I’ve been following for a while now and his music has always torn me down the middle. For the most part, Ichika has largely built a career on fast-paced shredders that clock in at just under two minutes, and while a lot of them fall into that cookie-cutter YouTube shredder scene, he has songs like “Orb”, “Awakening” and “i miss you” which display the insane technical prowess he’s known for, but not at the expense of the songs themselves. The aforementioned tracks have a reverie-like quality to them and create a really nourishing mood that makes you want more (when you consider how short the tracks are). So, when Nito announced The Moon’s Elbow, I was pretty excited to hear a full-length from him in the hope it would deliver on that alluring quality I just mentioned, while avoiding some of the rakes he’s known for stepping on.

Unfortunately, The Moon’s Elbow is a pretty devastating and derivative disappointment. The album sets off strong enough, with “Where I Begin” serving up a gorgeous serenade of gossamer licks in this soft, dream-esque cloud of sounds that welcome you in, but this is short-lived and immediately throws you into a head-pounding hellscape of soulless electronics and drums, enshrined in the super-pristine, highly processed modern production sound I’ve been heavily critical of in recent years. The Moon’s Elbow feels extremely dated and apes a lot of the sounds and styles from Polyphia’s flawed-but-decent 2021 record, Remember That You Will Die. However, when you consider for a moment that that record came out 4 years ago, it really puts into perspective how much this production style has aged, for the worse. There are a couple of decent moments on here, like the aforementioned album opener, “The Moon’s Elbow” and “we weren’t, were we?” for capturing that something Nito has shown us in the past, but the awful production manages to subjugate and ruin the organic essence of even these stripped back numbers. While the rest of the album has a banquet of dated and cliché ideas, and a bunch of terrible vocal guest spots adding further insult to injury. As I opened up with in this review, it’s a bemusing thing to think about: the kind of skill Ichika Nito holds, and yet the best The Moon’s Elbow can come up with is a collection of archaic ideas being filtered through a production devoid and stripped of all its humanity. It's a real shame.



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user ratings (5)
2.3
average


Comments:Add a Comment 
JoyfulPlatypus
Contributing Reviewer
January 31st 2026


1365 Comments


Great write up dude. Was thinking of checking this out myself.

Tundra
January 31st 2026


10835 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

Yes, the album is quite Polyphia inspired, but the distinct qualities of Ichika's approach is able to set it apart for me. I personally enjoy the more production-heavy tracks. I find them more replayable. While I like his stripped-back songs as well, I just have never found those tracks the most replayable in the past, and this fixes that for me.

brickhed
January 31st 2026


1551 Comments


as someone who enjoys mindlessly technical music (yes i will defend early behold the arctopus), this is a really well done write up. most people would rather spam the word wank and self indulgent for a few paragraphs and move on (not naming any names). wish i could updoot staff reviews.

"I compensate by trying to think outside of the box, doing things which might be considered a little unconventional. And in a way, I guess I feel a sense of gratitude for those technical restrictions and the hardships that come with it, because it makes me really dig hard to find stuff that sounds good to me. "
this quote is really nice. as an aspiring musician i really feel this, even if i can play good. its all about balance for the stuff i wanna make.

OwMySnauze
January 31st 2026


2716 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I had to remove the tracks with vocals, after that the album plays much better. This dude has gotten so much undeserved flack. Yeah he can’t play his hard stuff perfectly live but he's a great guitarist, his guitar tones and melodies from his Forn/She Waits Patiently EPs is what I’ve digged from the beginning. He needs to quit with the trap beats and stick to what he’s great at.

Calc
Contributing Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18075 Comments


doesn't this guy fake all his playthrough videos? pretty fuking lame man.

keaton_86
February 1st 2026


1409 Comments


Yep: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWYPnJaOF0U

DrGonzo1937
Staff Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18981 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

Thanks for showing me this Keaton. My brain can’t process why someone would base their whole career on a lie. This is why I fucking hate modern internet lol

DrGonzo1937
Staff Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18981 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

My review was based on just how dated his creative choices are; knowing this makes the record even worse

DrGonzo1937
Staff Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18981 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

Thanks for the kind feedback as well guys, it’s always appreciated

keaton_86
February 1st 2026


1409 Comments


Great review though. I think the first two paragraphs set the scene nicely.

StrizzMatik
February 1st 2026


4236 Comments


Yeah, dude is a massive fraud unfortunately. Sad thing is, he's obviously a fantastic composer and arranger who can actually play, but he's nowhere as solid of a player live without punch-ins, edits and miming to pretend like he's superhumanly perfect at guitar. Either way he's dishonest about his skills and not as good as he claims to be. LOTS of YT guys do the exact same thing.

wildinferno2010
February 1st 2026


1965 Comments


I'd be interested to know that, if this album was, like, incredibly creative musically - would it override the sting of knowing that it's fake playing in his yt videos? Like, how much of the appeal is how the music sounds, and that thrill you get watching someone who's really good at their instrument. That second aspect is basically gone now, and it comes with that sting of knowing that he was actively trying to fool people for years.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCcDEwT200s

The comment section here is pretty interesting. Some people definitely going with the "I always liked his songwriting most" thing.

DrGonzo1937
Staff Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18981 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

Well that’s the funny thing, the music here stinks. So if this is the best he’s got manipulating his playing, it makes him look even worse lol

DrGonzo1937
Staff Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18981 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

If it wasn’t obvious already, I didn’t have a clue about the controversy surrounding him, I was just basing my review on the music at face value

OwMySnauze
February 1st 2026


2716 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Don’t see how he’s a fraud when every music video ever has guitarists miming /playing over the produced polished track. He’s doing the same

Tundra
February 1st 2026


10835 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

He is kind of proven to be a deceptionist though... Which is where most of the controversy comes from. He titles a lot of his YouTube posts as (live music video) when it's not live and he is deceiving people. I don't really care, personally. I don't really care too much if an artist is able to play their music 100% cleanly live or not. While yes, Ichika Nito live is not 100% perfect, I don't mind too much if it's not note for note completely perfect. But I know that a lot of people are put off by this, and I could understand why.

CyberTaco
February 1st 2026


63 Comments


idk when you willingly put (live performance) in the title of the video and the audio is not of a live performance it does make me take everything with a hefty handful of salt

trilo
February 1st 2026


7182 Comments


i mean there's a difference between a music video, which is more about promotion and artistic expression, and a guitar playthrough. it's especially bad because he has multiple playthroughs that are labeled as live but not actually live and have egregious mistakes. marketing yourself as technical and proficient but unable to play your material well, or playing less technical music live to mask your deficiencies, is pretty lame

edit: damn we all basically said the same thing at the same time lmao

CyberTaco
February 1st 2026


63 Comments


oh shit twins

Calc
Contributing Reviewer
February 1st 2026


18075 Comments


"Don’t see how he’s a fraud when every music video ever has guitarists miming /playing over the produced polished track. He’s doing the same"

See, this is because you're a contrarian. There's a reason this guy is catching flack while people have been OK with music videos for decades. just takes a bit of thought is all.



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