
Ichiko Aoba: Luminescent Creatures review – nurturing music for bleak times
In a recent interview with the Guardian, Kyoto-raised Ichiko Aoba stated that she saw herself less as a conventional musician and more like a conduit of textures and atmospheres: 'I just love sound.' Across the immersive, celestial landscape of the hugely prolific Aoba's eighth studio album (she has also released numerous live records, soundtracks and more), it's this enveloping quality that is its quiet power. Though there have been quote-unquote 'singles' released in its run-up – the hypnotic, acoustic lullaby of Flag, or the rolling pianos and rippling harps of Luciférine – Luminescent Creatures is an album to fall into; prescription-worthy aural blood pressure medication against a frenetic world.
Inspired by field research into Japan's Ryukyu islands and Aoba's resultant meditations on the vast powers of the ocean, there is a tactile, organic beauty to Coloratura's twisting flutes and twinkling bells, or the underwater soundscape of instrumental interlude Cochlea. Though delicate and gentle – laced throughout with Aoba's featherlight voice – there's nothing cutesy about Luminescent Creatures. Soothing as a sound bath, yet powerful in its world-building, Aoba's continued ascent to stardom might seem unlikely, yet this is nurturing music for bleak times.
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Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
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Says our guide in Kyoto: 'There are some geishas who are working until they are 70 but those who want to marry and have children must leave the profession.' Recent years have seen a new battle emerge in Kyoto too, with geishas faced with tourists desperate to catch a glimpse of them as they walk to and from work in the four main geiko districts. Signs warning of fines of up to 10,000 yen (around £50) for non-consensual photographs, introduced in 2019, had previously failed to prevent people approaching geishas and in 2024, residents of Gion urged the city council to take action against tourists harassing geishas. On TikTik, one clip shows a geisha trying to swerve an irrepressible tourist armed with a smartphone as she makes her way down Hanamikoji street, with onlookers pleading with the sightseer to stop. A woman in one clip, shared by @gogotrain51718293628190, can be heard telling the holidaymaker: 'You can't do that, it's so rude'. Locals say the popularity of the districts had seen them overrun with sightseers, many of whom who will stop at nothing to get the perfect photo - one local described Gion's streets as being treated like a 'theme park'. Several streets are now off limits for the 'geisha paparazzi', with only those who've paid for a geisha experience, and local residents, allowed to enter. What's clear is that this enduring celebration of Japanese culture, while diminishing with each year that passes, remains just as fascinating now as it was hundreds of years ago.


Daily Mirror
2 days ago
- Daily Mirror
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Time Out
2 days ago
- Time Out
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