I've been trying to commit to posting at least once per month in my spare time; being sick the past week or so and not having any albums recently that have blown my wig off, I figured I would switch it up and post a movie recommendation that is music-adjacent.
'On-Gaku: Our Sound' by Kenji Iwaisawa came out in 2019, based on the 2005 manga 'Ongaku' ("Music") by Hiroyuki Oohashi. This movie has particular relevance to me/this blog, because one of the main characters, "Kenji" (center above), is voiced by Shintaro Sakamoto (singer/guitarist of Yura Yura Teikoku, now solo), the first I believe of his voice-acting credits. Some of the voice cast is also handled by other venerated Japanese musicians.
I won't give a movie review/film essay aside to say it is a very visually (and auditorily, with Shintaro also contributing to the soundtrack) appealing anime featuring rotoscoping with hand-drawn emphasis, centered around three teenage delinquents who decide to start a band together -- with none of them having any musical background. As you'd imagine, the hijinks and roadblocks that follow make for an entertaining and inspiring film. The plot builds to them performing live for the first time, and the result is indeed the "climax" in all senses of the film.
Just thought I would shout this out, sans an awkward scene (you'll know when you see it), it's a very enjoyable movie with slightly more deadpan comedy than drama, but overall a lot of heart; no doubt resonating with anyone who has jammed in a room with bandmates, especially for the first time.
I don't think any "regular" streaming services currently have this available (possibly Amazon for purchase?), so you might have to get creative or do extra digging to find it. But physical copies can be bought from Amazon or wherever.
I don't think any "regular" streaming services currently have this available (possibly Amazon for purchase?), so you might have to get creative or do extra digging to find it. But physical copies can be bought from Amazon or wherever.
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