Nujabes
Jun Seba, born Jun Yamada, better known by his stage name Nujabes, was a Japanese music producer best known for his atmospheric instrumental mixes sampling from hip-hop, soul, and jazz, as well as incorporating elements of trip hop, breakbeat, downtempo, and ambient music.
Seba released two studio albums during his lifetime: Metaphorical Music and Modal Soul, while the album Spiritual State was released posthumously in 2011. He was the founder of the independent label Hydeout Productions and released two collection compilations: Hydeout Productions 1st Collection and 2nd Collection. Additionally, Seba collaborated on the soundtrack for Shinichirō Watanabe's anime series Samurai Champloo in 2004.
Seba was an intensely private person and was a reluctant public figure throughout his career, who wanted the focus to be on his music and not on himself. He avoided interviews, promotional activities and so few were his photos that many fans were not even sure what he looked like.
In 2010, Seba died in a traffic collision at the age of 36. Although relatively niche during his lifetime, Seba has since achieved posthumous acclaim and been referred as the "godfather" of lo-fi hip hop.
Life and career
1974–1998: Early life and career beginnings
Seba was born as Jun Yamada on February 7, 1974, in the Nishi-Azabu district of Minato in central Tokyo, Japan. He grew up in eastern Tokyo, the city he would remain in for all his life.Seba's father worked for the National Tax Agency, but was an amateur jazz pianist and exposed him to music at a young age. Seba dabbled in music-making since high school and studied design at the Nihon University College of Art.
In 1995 much to the dismay of his father but supported by his mother, Seba opened a record store in Shibuya called Bongo Fury Records, later renamed to Guinness Records. The selection skewed away from commercial releases, mostly featuring underground hip-hop.
While operating Guinness Records, Seba began exploring different aspects of the music industry. In 1996 he started writing for music magazines under the pen name Seba Jun. Then, under the moniker Dimention Ball, he started making his own beats and pressing them into vinyl to sell in the store.
1998–2003: The start of Hydeout Productions and early collaborations
In 1998 he founded an independent record label first known as Hyde Out Recordings, then as Hyde Out Productions, and ultimately renamed to Hydeout Productions. In the same year, he released a 36-track mixtape titled Sweet Sticky Thing ''~Reload All Good Music From Old To The New~. The name was a nod to Ohio Players's homonymous track in their seminal album Honey. This was the first full-length work to be signed under the moniker Nujabes.In 1999 he released his first 12" recording, Ain't No Mystery, in collaboration with Verbal. In the same year he also released Peoples Don't Stray in collaboration with Funky DL. In 1999 he discovered Substantial through the mutual friend, rapper, and employee of the store, , and in 2000, he flew Substantial to Japan to collaborate for a month on what would become Substantial's debut album: To This Union A Sun Was Born. Both Funky DL and Substantial would go on to become lifelong collaborators.
In 2000 he met the MC Shing02 in Tokyo, and exchanged music with him. One track in particular stood out to Shing02, a beat that Seba had created for American producer and songwriter Pase Rock. Shing02, who already knew Pase Rock thanks to a previous collaboration, obtained permission from him to use the beat, and thus, in 2001, the track "Luv" was born. This was the first track of the Luv Hexalogy'', one of Seba's most popular and influential works. The second track, "Luv Part 2" followed shortly in 2002, after the September 11 attacks forced Shing02 to stay in Tokyo longer than expected.
Between 2001 and 2004 he collaborated with Nao Tokui, an artist and AI technology researcher, on a shared project called URBANFOREST. Despite spending many days together over the years, experimenting with Max software and listening to new music, they only finished one track together, "Rotary Park", one of Seba's most experimental works.
In 2003 he opened a second record store, affiliated with Hydeout Productions, called Tribe.
2003: ''1st collection'' and ''Metaphorical Music''
In April 2003, Seba put together a compilation album from songs produced by Hydeout Productions, Hydeout Productions 1st Collection, which featured artists such as Funky DL, Apani B. Fly, Substantial, Shing02, L-Universe, Pase Rock, Five Deez, Uyama Hiroto, and Cise Starr.In August 2003, Seba released his debut studio album, Metaphorical Music. Recorded and mixed in Seba's private Park Avenue Studio, the album's initial release was modest, with recognition growing significantly in later years, to eventually become a cult classic.
2004: ''Samurai Champloo'' and international recognition
Seba was one of the main contributors to the soundtrack of the anime series Samurai Champloo directed by Shinichirō Watanabe, which blended a feudal Japanese setting with modern anachronisms, such as hip hop culture, graffiti, and rapping. This is where he met rapper Fat Jon, who would become a friend, collaborator, and strong influence on Seba's later work.While Samurai Champloo was met with lukewarm reception in Japan, it was critically acclaimed and developed a cult following in the West, partially due to its soundtrack which was widely praised and was ranked by IGN as tenth among their Top Ten Anime Themes and Soundtracks of All Time. To this project Seba contributed some of the most popular tracks: the opening theme "Battlecry", "Aruarian Dance", which spread virally through the internet, and "Departure" and "Impression" which became seminal works for lo-fi hip hop artists. This success catapulted Seba, who at the time was still an underground figure, into the international spotlight and reached many fans who would later discover his earlier works.
2005–2007: ''2nd collection'' and ''Modal Soul''
In 2005 Seba released his second studio album, Modal Soul. Like his debut album, Modal Soul fuses jazzy, smooth rhythms and hip hop, but with more downtempo and a different quality to transitions and mixing that has been attributed to Fat Jon's influence. The fourth track is another installment of his collaboration with Shing02, "Luv Part 3".It was also some time after the success of both Modal Soul and Samurai Champloo that Seba would make the move to Kamakura, an ocean-side city an hour-and-a-half away from his original studio in Tokyo. There a new recording studio would be made in the basement of his home and the change of scenery would mark a shift in Seba's musical direction.
In 2007 Seba released another compilation album, Hydeout Productions 2nd Collection. The album featured some of his most recurring collaborators such as Pase Rock, Uyama Hiroto, and Shing02, as well as some new remixes and singles.
2008–2009: Growth of Hydeout Productions and Modal Soul Classics
In 2008, Seba would continue to expand his label by reissuing Emanciptor's first album Soon It Will Be Cold Enough and by helping to release two new debut albums: A Son Of The Sun by Uyama Hiroto, and Fallicia by Kenmochi Hidefumi who was recently signed on to the label. It was also during this time that Seba would release another compilation album, Modal Souls Classics, this time focusing on artists he liked and were inspired by at the time. To help design the album covers for these upcoming new releases, Seba reached out to graphic designer Jiro Fujita and commissioned him for four covers. Seba felt inspired to work with him after seeing his work for the artist Calm, who at the time he considered to be his biggest rival.Around 2009, another compilation album would be licensed by Hydeout, Mellow Beats, Friends & Lovers, and released through Universal Music. During this time as well, Seba was very active on the social media platform MySpace and would come into contact with Marcus D and Zack Austin who was later signed on to the label to release a debut album, The Art of Music. Seba would continue work on his own upcoming album as well as help Austin to release his up until his death. Because of how involved and how unexpected Seba's death was, The Art of Music got scrapped with parts of it being released years later through Austin's own label, Visioneternal, by means of an EP, B-Sides Unreleased Material, and his debut album ''Dayscapes.''
2010–2013: Death and posthumous work
On February 26, 2010, Seba was involved in a traffic collision while leaving the Shuto Expressway in Tokyo. He was taken to a hospital in Shibuya Ward, where he was pronounced dead after efforts to revive him were unsuccessful. Seba is buried in Tama Cemetery, Tokyo.His death interrupted work on his third studio album, Spiritual State, and his decade-long collaboration with Shing02, the Luv hexalogy, both of which have been completed posthumously by his friends and collaborators.