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ASKA TEMPLE
ASKA TEMPLE is a re-discovery of music past in many ways. In the early days Eurock was inspired by the explosion of rock experimentalism coming out of continental Europe, the mutated strains of US and Anglo psychedelic/ progressive innovations. Time passed, the world turned, and the mode of the music changed with the advent of technology, development of the �multi-market�, and a generation shift. To an incredible extent the spirit of creativity has been diminished. Upon first hearing the Japanese �band� ASKA TEMPLE (the group moniker for the music of one Muneharu Yuuba, aka, John Ubel), I was stunned that something could flash me back so strongly to the sound and fury of pure creativity that I had heard in early �krautrock�. It was extreme, improvised and filled with pure cosmic energy. Further exploration of the large catalog of releases by the �band� on the NICHTS Records label increased my interest. I found the music, creative approach and artistic presentation embodied in the whole �concept� fascinating. In addition to ASKA TEMPLE, Ubel plays in a Japanese Scum rock band named PRISONER NO. 6 that explores the outer edges of "rock 'n' roll". His talent for musical creation is vast. I subsequently made contact with him. This interview and label rundown attempts to offer a glimpse into the mythos - story and music - of ASKA TEMPLE. For historical perspective I've done a capsule review run down of the 22 titles released on the label to go along with this interview, trying my best to convey the spirit and make valid comparison to the early German pioneers. All CDs are now sadly OUT OF PRINT! A~
John Ubel INTERVIEW
Q: Do you remember who your favorite band was in the early days?
Q: What was the first instrument you played/ at what age?
Q: When did you form your first band?
Q: What was the name of your first band, and what kind of music did you
play?
Q: Who were the musicians that influenced you?
Q: The music of ASKA
TEMPLE
seems very much influenced by some of the early
�krautrock� musicians. What were your favorite German bands?
Q: Your music does seem to have a very cosmic and spiritual side
to it. Do you have those sorts of ideas in your mind when you make it? I remembered when I was in my mother's body, and what I thought about before birth. I wanted to make the sounds of The Land of DEATH, or the eternal darkness. I overdubbed 200 times a KORG MS-20. I did it during the full moon. I wanted to approach the state of NICHTS (meaning nothingness in the lore of Japanese MU). This was similar to KITAROU NISHIDA, a Japanese philosopher who says the SUBJECT and OBJECT makes a circle, and the center point becomes NICHTS (�Nothing�), which is the name I gave my record label. My overdub was going on and on, until it lost its center point. I wanted to create more and more abstraction. It was a battle of boy against the material and spirit. I think purity of spirit occurs during the struggle against the material. The DEATH BOOK recording was the base point musically for me. I had never done a recording like that. ASKA TEMPLE means dead civilization, and the remaining old graves and ruins, a Land of DEATH; the people in this land are ghosts. There were many battles in this small land in ancient times. And I live everyday in this land with the ghosts. When I play it looks insane, playing mad sounds on guitar and synthesizer, but I must play these sounds, because I feel the ghosts make me do it.
Q: Do you hope that people experience a certain state of
consciousness or feeling when listening to your music?
Q: Your releases have �cosmic� art work, again like the early
German bands. Some are actually recorded live in concert; do you also record in
your own studio, or a professional studio?
Q: Do you envision your productions as some form of fusion - art
plus music = conceptual work?
Q: Ultimately do you want to be more successful in the commercial
pop music realm or do you prefer simply to make music because you love it?
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