Single and LP Reviews: SADATO GROUP/ALEF – A Deeper Legacy – by Dawoud Kringle (DooBeeDooBeeDoo NY, 5/12/2025)
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“Ever the trailblazer, SoSaLa – or Sadato, as he was known in those days – transformed ALEF from a music ensemble to the first real multi-media performance group in Japan. It used butoh and modern dancers, actors, a stripper, and a pantomime artist. In 1987, SoSaLa released ALEF’s only recording, Hajime, on his indie label Kampai Rec. In addition to the musical contributions by Ishida, Kato, and Gunn, SoSaLa played Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Synthesizer, Flute, and Vocals.” – Read more here: Single and LP Reviews: SADATO GROUP/ALEF – A Deeper Legacy – by Dawoud Kringle (DooBeeDooBeeDoo NY, 5/12/2025)
“Another nutty curio from the ’80s Japanese underground. Moments of suave delicacy slam face-first into punch-drunk idiocy in a manner the Japanese ought to just take a patent out on. Flutes flutter, plinky plonky guitars wiggle around pitter-patter percussion and zany japanese people do funny things to their voices with effects (which I suppose qualifies this as “zolo”), only to yield to slick jazz funk, then, disjointed synthesizer splats and blats, then dumbo hard rock with free jazz sax…Yup…it’s a good one!” – Posted by vdoandsound (MUTANT SOUNDS), May 22, 2007
“Progressive composer, performance artist Sadato, an Iranian raised in Europe who has lived here for over ten years, has also managed to finance an album of his group AIef. “Several record producers told me to make more commercial music, and they’d be
willing to talk. But I just can’t do it,” he admitted. With records in Tower and a few other record stores around Tokyo, Sadato is now on a self-promotion tour of the U.S. and Europe.” – TOKYO JOURNAL, December, 1988
“Hajime sounds much like an ALEF performance, full of provocative chords, riffs, and just plain weird noises accompanying lyric passages suggesting dream-like states, non-shared reality, and stop-action flashes of insight. Most elections have Japanese lyrics, including the haunting ‘Ningen,” the mysteriously dramatic ‘Bachan No Tea Time,’ and ‘Sarariman Shine,’ a portrait of fear and dread in the white-collar workforce.” – Bryan Harrell (Japan Times), June 7, 1988
ALEF Concert review by FRIDAY or FLASH


