eastern youth
感受性応答セヨ


4.0
excellent

Review

by Zack Lorenzen CONTRIBUTOR (35 Reviews)
March 26th, 2019 | 41 replies


Release Date: 2001 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Just listen.

Formed in Sapporo in 1989, Eastern Youth is one of Japan’s longest-running and most influential independent bands. Their earliest work, fitting of their namesake, was raw, snappy punk rock about the social alienation of their homeland’s younger generation, but by the mid-1990s, the three-piece began to evolve, sonically and lyrically. Gradually adding more melodic elements to their sound, expanding their song structures and topics, and taking influence from American underground icons like Fugazi, Built to Spill, and Jawbreaker, the group’s transitional period resulted in a handful of their most iconic records. 1998’s Tabiji ni Kisetsu ga Moeochiru and Kumo Inuke Koe the following year cemented Eastern Youth as legends of their country’s indie rock scene, a status that would later allow them to embark on foreign tours with the likes of At The Drive-In, Jimmy Eat World, and Cursive.

All of which is to say that while there’s a good chance you’ve never heard of Eastern Youth, they’ve been around for three decades and made the most of it. Kanjusei Outouseyo, their first release of the new millennium, is one from their peak period that makes a mighty strong first impression. Dominated by overdriven power chords and impassioned vocal deliveries, it’d be an easy mistake to write off the band’s formula as simplistic or repetitive when in fact they get massive mileage out of sticking to their core arrangement of tight drum chops, playful bass lines, and commanding rhythm guitar. Solos aren’t particularly common, but the few times they crop up here—evoking a beautiful sunrise in “Yoake no Uta” and uneasy tumult in “Kuroi Taiyou” in particular—they pack a mighty wallop.

However, no discussion of Eastern Youth’s sound is complete without patting vocalist Hisashi Yoshino on the back. The man can project a sweet as hell lead melody, choke over his words with an affecting lump-in-throat whimper, belt in distress as if his lungs are about to cave in, and switch from one style to the other without a moment’s pause. Similarly, much of the compositional work here capitalizes on grand, sudden, and universally gratifying shifts in dynamics: whether it’s hushed to humongous or forte to fortissississimo, the band’s sheer energy and unending hookiness easily overcome the language barrier. From the full-throttle anthem of “Abayo, Kaze no Zanzou” to where the dynamic curveballs are most vital, like the album’s brilliant centerpiece “Kakato Naru” and closer “Subarashii Sekai,” it’s hard not to latch onto the melodies within a listen or two, stomp your foot to the pulse, and anticipate then revel in each well-earned climax.

All that said, consistency is still the name of the game. The average Eastern Youth album from this period has its fair share of go-to chord progressions and rarely any extreme sonic experiments (which is another way of saying you’ll probably need a few spins for the word “samey” to leave your head). Rather it’s the group’s ability to embellish those similar structures with minor redirections and keep the songwriting so compelling that’s such a treat. As a bonus, Kanjusei Outouseyo fares a bit better than some of the trio’s other works in that regard: the dancy, Latin infusions of “Seijaku ga Moeru” make for one of their most overt stylistic shake-ups, as does the intoxicated, trippy breakdown of “Ao no Fuukei” and the twangy catharsis unleashed during the album’s slow-burning opener. Even the waltzing pre-chorus of “Nigatsu wa Biniiru Kasa no Naka” initially throws the listener off after a half-hour of common time so energetic you didn’t once bother to think about meter.

And why would you? To some extent all of the praise above seeks to dissect what makes this album tick, and like most of the best of that nebulous ground between emo, punk, and indie, this album’s true charm lies not in analyzing these songs’ constituent parts or novel eccentricities, but in the blunt force of their emotional resonance. Suffice to say Eastern Youth did the trick for many an Eastern youth circa 2001, and thanks to the magic of the internet, there’s no reason their legacy has to remain confined to that sphere and time. If you have any interest in checking out one of Japan’s premier underground acts, Kanjusei Outouseyo is an ideal place to enter the wonderful world that is their discography.



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user ratings (16)
4.2
excellent

Comments:Add a Comment 
ashcrash9
Contributing Reviewer
March 26th 2019


3344 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

First review in almost 2 years and I spend it weebin' out, figures. Seriously though, these dudes are great. Recommended by reviewer section is other Japanese emo/punk/indie from the same period since Western comparisons/recs are already given in the review itself.



Album stream:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwa4fYh1adE



Cheers.

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
March 26th 2019


60210 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

NICE! really good write-up and great to see this get a review. Agreed on all your points, especially that it takes a few listens to not feel samey. Will have a browse of your recs; School Girl Distortional is a banger, so that bodes well



Really hope people check this out, I could see it winding up as an easy Sput sleeper hit if it weren't for the language barrier. Closer is phenomenal

ashcrash9
Contributing Reviewer
March 26th 2019


3344 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Thanks, Johnny! I feel the same - got a hunch this sound would click with the average Sput fan of these genres if they give it a couple goes. Hope you dig those other recs too!

Uzumaki
March 26th 2019


4466 Comments


Really nice review; never heard of them before, but I’ll make it a point to go searching around for this on te interwebz.

brainmelter
Contributing Reviewer
March 26th 2019


8318 Comments


nice, band rules

samwise2000
March 27th 2019


1839 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Great review, pos'd!

Flugmorph
March 27th 2019


33864 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

gonna jam

dimsim3478
March 27th 2019


8987 Comments


OH COOL SOMEONE FINALLY REVIEWED THIS AMAZING ALBUM

Will have a browse of your recs; School Girl Distortional is a banger, so that bodes well

kocorono is the fuckin shiz

Yep321
March 29th 2019


332 Comments


Split with Cursive is so good. Need to check this.

dimsim3478
March 29th 2019


8987 Comments


ya this is a really good album to start with cuz it's relatively immediate and their top 3 best songs ever are all on this one album

here they are:
Kakato Naru - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_vnO4J6OFe4
Seijyaku ga Moeru - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0_JYCGo_jo
Subarashii Sekai - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrJ_NV-ZZdM

ashcrash9
Contributing Reviewer
March 29th 2019


3344 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I disagree with 2 of those 3 picks but also can't fault you for 'em, which just goes to show how consistent this record is, lol

Asdfp277
April 24th 2019


24275 Comments


the songs dim linked rule m/

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
July 15th 2019


60210 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

"kocorono is the fuckin shiz"

Wow I slept on this, gonna check it now

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
July 15th 2019


60210 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Holy shit Kocorono is all-time gold for noisey indie. Some of that shit is Daydream Nation-level incredible.

ashcrash9
Contributing Reviewer
July 17th 2019


3344 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Yeeeeeesssss, glad you dug it, Johnny!

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
July 17th 2019


60210 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Going to have to explore their discog further! It also gave me some syrup16g vibes, so will have to get back to theirs ;]

Flugmorph
April 3rd 2020


33864 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

excellent band, excellent album

dimsim3478
April 4th 2020


8987 Comments


just watched their new 30th anniversary live DVD and it kicks so much ass. it's got a few songs from this too.

Flugmorph
May 20th 2021


33864 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

seldom have I heard music so laden with raw emotion



JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
May 20th 2021


60210 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This album does have feelings



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