Shogun Kunitoki

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Mulberg 04:10 Tools
Montezuma 04:56 Tools
Riddarholmen 03:18 Tools
Leivonen 05:08 Tools
Tropiikin kuuma huuma 05:37 Tools
Vinonaamakasio 01:34 Tools
Daniel 04:20 Tools
1918-1926 04:49 Tools
Holvikirkko 07:21 Tools
Tulevaisuus-Menneisyys=1 03:13 Tools
Fuzzabeth Crackleby 03:05 Tools
Piste 03:03 Tools
Corda 01:55 Tools
Svileto 04:05 Tools
Ratalintu 02:59 Tools
Nebulus 06:40 Tools
04 - Daniel 06:40 Tools
05 - Tulevaisuus-Menneisyys=1 06:40 Tools
Fuzzabeth 03:05 Tools
07 - Piste 03:05 Tools
01 montezuma 03:05 Tools
04 daniel 03:05 Tools
02 leivonen 03:05 Tools
03 tropiikin kuuma huuma 03:05 Tools
05 tulevaisuus miinus menneisyys = 1 03:05 Tools
5:36 03:05 Tools
Shogun Kunitoki - Fuzzabeth Crackleby 03:05 Tools
Daniel (from Tasankokaiku) 03:05 Tools
Tulevaisuus Menneisyys 03:13 Tools
Mulberg - Shogun Kunitoki 04:10 Tools
Tucevaisuus - Menneisyys=1 03:13 Tools
06 1918 - 1926 04:10 Tools
Tulevaisuus-Menneisyys-1 04:10 Tools
Tulevaisuus minus menneisyys = 1 04:10 Tools
Episode 163 - April 22nd, 2009 06:18 Tools
Tulevaisuus Miinus Menneisyys 06:18 Tools
Tulevaisuus 06:18 Tools
02 Mulberg 06:18 Tools
06 - 1918 - 1926 06:18 Tools
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Shogun Kunitoki has been in existence since the late 1990s, but it wasn't until around 2003 that they discovered their own voice. In its earliest incarnation Shogun Kunitoki featured four to six Commodore 64 computers that were used to create all sounds. Their austere approach to chiptune music gained them some notoriety, most notably a spot at Helsinki's Avanto festival — and also attracted the attention of Fonal Records. However, after a few years the band was becoming frustrated by the restrictions of 8-bit computers, and when an electrical fault destroyed most of their equipment, things started moving. The C64s had to be replaced with something, and this lead to a period of fermentation during which Shogun Kunitoki moved away from computer-based music, and was eventually reborn as a real band with live instrumentation and a new, organic sound. Shogun Kunitoki's debut album, Tasankokaiku, released by Fonal in early 2006, stands as a culmination of the group's long search for their own musical language. Tasankokaiku consists of seven instrumental compositions that retain touches of the more angular feel of their earlier, sequenced songs, but are fleshed out using a looser, semi-improvised approach made possible by the use of live keyboards. The result has been described by reviewers as fresh and unique but strangely familiar at the same time, a timeless kaleidoscope of sounds culled from five decades of electronic music, psychedelia and minimalism. On stage Shogun Kunitoki have always used moving images as a counterpart to their hypnotic sounds. Early live shows involved abstract animations programmed in Commodore BASIC, and nowadays the music is accompanied by looping Super 8 -projections, all shot or painted, printed and scratched directly on film by the band. Besides their native Finland, Shogun Kunitoki have performed in Sweden, Estonia, Netherlands and Belgium. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.