stands as the most important artist in noise music. The favorite moniker of Japanese
appears on hundreds of albums. The name comes from German artist
' famous work Merzbau, which he also called The Cathedral of Erotic Misery.
' collage method) and his fascination with ritualized eroticism, namely in the form of fetishism and bondage. All these elements constitute the
Akita was born in Tokyo in 1956. He grew up with psychedelic rock and began to play the guitar in progressive rock cover bands, in particular with drummer
Kiyoshi Mizutani, who would remain a frequent collaborator. After high school,
Akita studied literature and visual arts in college. There he discovered free jazz and studied seriously the ideas of Dada and the surrealists (
Salvador Dali remained a big influence).
Akita gradually withdrew himself from the rock scene and began experimenting in his basement with broken tape recorders and feedback.
In 1979,
Akita created his own cassette label, Lowest Arts & Music, and released the first of many albums, Metal Acoustic Music. Infiltrating the then-burgeoning network of underground industrial music,
Merzbow lined up one cassette after another, packaged in Xeroxed collage art. His harsh noise eschewed the primitive anger found on this scene (
Throbbing Gristle,
Man Is the Bastard) to reach a Zen state, calm inside the storm.
Mizutani occasionally appeared on some of the raw material, as would other musicians (like Reiko.A), but in essence
Merzbow is Akita and would always be. The artist/group made low-budget live appearances in Tokyo, but his main focus remained on his art production and his writing (he is erudite in 20th century art and the Japanese tradition of bondage).
In 1983,
Akita's first LP, Material Action 2 (NAM), was released on Chaos/Eastern Works in Japan. Out of the mail-art network and into the specialty record shops,
Merzbow began to attract some eyes and ears.
Akita started a second label, ZSF Produkt, which put out dozens of 7"s, EPs, LPs, and more cassettes. By the late '80s, other record labels had begun to pay interest, namely the Australian Extreme. Collaborative (1988), an LP recorded with
Achim Wollscheid, brought the
Merzbow sound to more international listeners, and slowly
Akita invaded other territories. By the mid-'90s, his reputation verged on the mythical. He toured Europe and the U.S., and had high(er)-profile releases on Extreme, RRR, and Alchemy.
In 1997, Extreme announced it was putting in production a 50-CD box set,
Merzbox. It was finally released three years later. It includes 30 reissues dating as far back as 1979, and 20 discs' worth of unreleased material, and remains the biggest musical statement in the history of noise music. More widely available albums for Alien8 Recordings (
Aqua Necromancer, 1998) and Tzadik (
1930, 1998), combined with constant worldwide touring, have taken the artist out of mythical status and propelled him into the legendary. In the late '90s,
Akita started to collaborate with other artists outside the
Merzbow moniker, namely with
Mike Patton (as
Maldoror) and
Otomo Yoshihide. Both a prolific composer and performer,
Akita continued his string of
Merzbow releases into the next century, including
Frog (2001),
V (2003),
Merzbird (2004), the two-volume set
Minazo (2006),
Merzbear and
Synth Destruction (2007),
Dolphin Sonar (2008), and the multi-volume
13 Japanese Birds series issued monthly between January 2009 and January 2010. He followed this massive undertaking with
Another Merzbow Records, released by the U.K's Dirtier Promotions imprint in April of 2010. Ever prolific, and with a huge backlog of archival material,
Akita released ten collections in 2011, as well as an additional four live sets, and four more albums appeared in 2012, along with the box sets Merzphysics and Merzmorphosis.
–
François Couture, Rovi