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  1. Hace 1 día · "El castillo de arena" de Matsumoto es una novela autoconclusiva de unas 340 páginas en donde se nos traslada al Japón de los años 60. Mediante una trama sutilmente tejida en la que, a primera vista, parece no suceder gran cosa, Matsumoto hace en realidad un análisis profundo de la sociedad mientras se desenreda un crimen de premisa simple pero que se vuelve exageradamente complejo a cada ...

  2. Hace 2 días · On his 1982 debut, Music For Nine Post Cards, Hiroshi Yoshimura burst into the world with a daylit, dreamy formula. The Japanese producer self-recorded the album using a Fender Rhodes, ...

  3. Hace 1 día · Working backward to Cola Ren’s originals, it’s clear that while the remixers have added their own respective brands of fairy dust, the magic was right there in the songs from the beginning: Across the EP’s five tracks, she lays out a beautiful and remarkably coherent blend of Hiroshi Yoshimura vibraphones and Balearic percussion, with some of the most inventive percussion I’ve heard ...

  4. Hace 1 día · The resulting music unfolds patiently, with the musicians of HOCKET — Sarah Gibson and Thomas Kotcheff — leading a conversational and lush performance that recalls Hiroshi Yoshimura’s ...

  5. Hace 1 día · Loraine James's Mysterious Beat Labyrinths and Hiroshi Yoshimura’s Classic '80s Ambient Reissue. Just Can't Get Enough? Sign up for our newsletter for news recaps, updates, and more!

  6. Hace 1 día · Once more akin to Hiroshi Yoshimura, Susumu Yokoto or Harold Budd absorbing the holiday reminisces of Iberia, Retro Porter picks up on the arts and crafts decorative tracery sketches of Empress Nouveau, taking inspiration this time around from the artistry of Gaudí with references to the cemented-together broken tile shards mosaic method of “Trencadis” and his most ambitious, unfinished ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Unit_731Unit 731 - Wikipedia

    Hace 1 día · Established in 1936, Unit 731 was responsible for some of the most notorious war crimes which were committed by the Japanese armed forces. Internally, it dehumanized the people who it routinely conducted tests on by referring to them as "logs".