The Soundtrack To The Television Special About The Making Of 'The Sushi That Ate Tokyo' is track 1 on 1909E by Hal McGee, originally released on cassette on the HalTapes label in 1998.
The opening track, "The Soundtrack To The Television Special About The Making Of 'The Sushi That Ate Tokyo' ", starts out with overlapping layers of shortwave radio transmissions and Casio VA-10 keyboard feedback and tonal bursts -- and later segues into tapes of dogs barking and spoken word statements about the importance of saying nothing.
supported by 4 fans who also own “The Soundtrack To The Television Special About The Making Of 'The Sushi That Ate Tokyo'”
I love how organic and alive this record's component wonky synths and warbling guitar work are. I've occasionally come across unappreciated experimental albums like this before, that always spark my imagination and sound (to my ears at least) like some of sort of audio-portrait of a music-based lifeform. Brandon Lopez's "The Church Of Plenty, Empty" and the "Deadly Chronicles: Assaults From The Land And The Sea" by deepseaorganism/Bug Catcher are similarly bioaudiological, in my opinion. Ben Harris
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