Hays Davis - 16.02.2011  As with Fujiya & Miyagi's previous records, Ventriloquizzing seems sonically constructed to fly under the radar. Drums maintain a steady, understated ...
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Pete Woolley - 16.02.2011 Fujiya and Miyagi?s second full-length ends big. Of sorts. The final track?s title, Universe prepares you for enormity. Instead, what you get is a slo...
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Ian Mathers - 10.02.2011  No disrespect to the rest of the band, but the real reason I love Fujiya & Miyagi is David Best’s vocals. Not lyrics, mind you, which are fine if a bi...
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Jenn Metzler - 08.02.2011 Ventriloquizzing puts you in a dimly lit room having what you thought was a just a friendly chat, except that your friend is telling you more than you...
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Jamie O'Meara - 03.02.2011 British electro four-piece Fujiya & Miyagi keep to their minimal, melodic krautrockin' manifesto on this fourth studio album proper, a mostly chill af...
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ENGRAM - 28.01.2011  Gone are thesemi-funk grooves of Transparent Things'"Photocopier" and the upbeat, plucky beats of Light Bulbs'"Pterodactyls" that perfectly complement...
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Stuart Berman - 28.01.2011  Fujiya & Miyagi have always been open about their admiration for Krautrock icons Can, but that influence has as much to do with methodology as mere mi...
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Danny Djeljosevic - 28.01.2011  Minimalism is tricky. While taking a barebones approach is always kind of admirable compared to the amount of indulgent, lush works of pop music in th...
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Keith Cushner - 26.01.2011  Like so many one-time buzz bands, Fujiya & Miyagi has one trick, and it used to be able to do it well. The band's brand of lo-fi funk mixed with eleme...
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Laura Studarus - 26.01.2011  The British quartet masquerading as a Japanese duo is back with its fourth full-length, Ventriloquizzing, bringing along a signature slinky groove and...
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