TOSS
On his previous albums, Japanese multi-instrumentalist Shugo Tokumaru has brilliantly showcased his ability to push the boundaries of what pop music can be — crafting infinitely rewarding songs built on layers upon layers of sounds produced by instruments both familiar and unique. For TOSS, Tokumaru originally intended to take a much more straightforward path, enlisting the help of musicians from around the world (including members of his live band, an orchestra, Maya Denki, and many others) to record bits and pieces of music without knowing how they would ultimately be used. Says Tokumaru, “With my previous record (2012’s In Focus?), it was like I managed to unify what I had done in my musical career up until then. For this record, the original idea was just to do some recording sessions with other musicians and release them as they are, but it turned into something entirely different.” The about-face occurred when Tokumaru started to take the fragments others had recorded for him and began lining up the short phrases and riffs, repeatedly combining and substituting the arrangements as if he was working on a musical puzzle. Explains Tokumaru, “I went into the studio without a single song and started from scratch to collect recordings. I got inspiration from such fragments and made a demo which started to look like a song. Sometimes I received sound materials from various people, edited them to make a song and then asked the musicians to play it again.” Besides Tokumaru, the biggest contributor to TOSS is Deerhoof drummer Greg Saunier, who played along to click tracks at various tempos — providing ample source material for Tokumaru to manipulate as he pleased. Though much more time-consuming than his original vision, the songs on TOSS are all testaments to Tokumaru’s innate understanding of how to craft a piece of music that becomes much greater than the sum of its parts.
Shugo Tokumaru’s songs barrel towards joyous cacophony at full tilt. On his latest LP, he expands his one-man chamber-pop sound with drum tracks from Deerhoof’s Greg Saunier.
There's a song called "Bricolagemusic" on Shugo Tokumaru's sixth album Toss, and it's a perfect statement of purpose: While Tokumaru made most of his other albums on his own (except for playing the drums), this time he throws the doors wide open, inviting members of his live band, an orchestra, Deerhoof drummer Greg Saunier, and art collective Maywa Denki to record source material that he later edited into these songs.