Nothing Changes No One Can Change Anything, I Am Ever-Changing Only You Can Change Yourself cover

Nothing Changes No One Can Change Anything, I Am Ever-Changing Only You Can Change Yourself

Released

This nearly three-hour performance from April 1996 was legendary for years; during a 2000 interview, Haino told me that the recording was sadly unreleasable, but it made its way into James Plotkin’s hands and whatever he did to it, the final product sounds amazing. It has a ritualistic quality, beginning with nearly 13 minutes of slowly pounding drums and small cymbals, and Brötzmann doesn’t even show up until hour two, when he unspools long muezzin-like cries as the bandmembers (or maybe the audience?) shout and wail like tormented souls in hell. Bassist Jun Kosugi and drummer Yasushi Ozawa get a lot of room to stretch out, creating a kind of improvised psychedelic jazz-doom. When Haino’s guitar comes in for the first time, around the 20-minute mark, it’s like the fabric of the universe tearing open. This is not an album you can just throw on, or skip around in; you’ve got to take the whole ride.

Phil Freeman

Suggestions
Northernsong cover

Northernsong

Luke Norris
Dark Sunrise cover

Dark Sunrise

Rikki Ililonga, Musi-O-Tunya
Dreamt Twice, Twice Dreamt cover

Dreamt Twice, Twice Dreamt

Ingrid Laubrock, Sam Pluta, Cory Smythe
Imikuzushi cover

Imikuzushi

Keiji Haino, Oren Ambarchi, Jim O'Rourke
Lebroba cover

Lebroba

Bill Frisell, Wadada Leo Smith, Andrew Cyrille
Frances the Mute cover

Frances the Mute

The Mars Volta
Since Time Is Gravity  cover

Since Time Is Gravity

Natural Information Society
The Peach Orchard cover

The Peach Orchard

In Order to Survive, William Parker
Double Demon cover

Double Demon

Starlicker