We use cookies on our website to provide you with the best experience. Most of these are essential and already present.
We do require your explicit consent to save your cart and browsing history between visits. Read about cookies we use here.
Your cart and preferences will not be saved if you leave the site.
play
1
2
3
4
5
6

Reimaki

The Path Where Fairies Pass (LP)

Label: An'Archives

Format: LP

Genre: Experimental

In process of stocking: April 17

€28.50
VAT exempt
+
-

Double LP ltd to 300, black vinyl, 3 color (silver, dark blue & black) silkscreened jacket with obi (dark blue or paver red), with Miyanishi Keizo notes in French, English and Japanese, lyrics in Japanese and English and a postcard. 妖精の通る道 (The Path Where Fairies Pass) is the debut vinyl release by Reimaki, the duo of Rei Yokoyama (Triggers Flowers, Stakaidan, Lapiz Trio, 新井薬師自警団, and Fujio, Chiko Hige and Rei), and Maki Miura (Tsubamegami, Les Rallizes Dénudés, Shizuka, Fushitsusha, Ohkami No Jikan and Katsurei).

The duo has been an understated presence in Tokyo, playing occasional under-the-radar shows and self releasing a few CD-Rs, but they've recently started to break cover, with a recent cassette on UFO Creations, released in support of a late 2024 tour of China. It's also a welcome reappearance on the scene for both musicians; Miura's musical history, in particular, is being reevaluated thanks to a recent string of welcome Shizuka reissues.

But the music Reimaki make together is a different thing entirely, much as it shares some psychological and aesthetic interests with both Miura's and Yokoyama's other projects. Their sound is split between two main interests - an extension of glacial, deoxygenating psychedelic improvisations, and a deep interest in medieval European music. They've also been known to cover compositions by English prog/improv musician Fred Frith. These various elements of the Reimaki aesthetic are all present through 妖精の通る道, from the fragility of the opening "Novel Amor" through to the smeared, hazy textures of the three extended pieces that comprise the album's flipside.

There's a beautiful sympathy in these performances, and a generous simplicity, too; you can sense that this music is informed by decades of finding just the right way to say the right thing in the clearest manner possible. Yokoyama and Miura never overstate things; make the statement, play the song, let it hang in the air for a while, and then move on to the next essential expression. The music is unburdened by self consciousness. Their take on medieval music cuts to the core of melody and melancholy; their psych improv side is blurred and drifting without ever lapsing into rote generic gestures.

There's some shared space with other artists who suspend the timeless within the kaleidoscopic possibilities of the psychedelic - Kendra Smith & The Guild of Temporal Adventurers; Emmanuelle Parrenin; Rosina de Peira - and a tangled folksiness that might put listeners in mind of Jan Dukes De Grey, Comus, Current 93, and Tower Recordings. Accompanied by beautiful photography from street photographer Takehiko Nakafuji, who was also personally chosen by Mizutani to document Les Rallizes Dénudés, 妖精の通る道 is a most unique and necessary trip.

Details
Cat. number: An 55
Year: 2026