Eddie Marcon Eddie Marcon Himeji In the all-female duo Coa, Eddie Corman trades on volume and velocity in a howling rock beast that could well fit the bill soundtracking an apocalyptic horror movie. Both Eddie and Marcon first played together in an early incarnation of LSD-March, pysch-blasted legends of the Japanese underground. Combining their names to form a new endeavour into Japanese acid folk, Eddie and Marcon as Eddie Marcon have been working in much quieter tones to make delicate, gorgeous and esoteric music. Shining on Graveposts cradles the mysterious, melancholic air so unique to much Japanese music in intimate spaces. The graceful arc of Eddies guitar melodies entwined with the shuffle and swirl of Marcons percussion are the humble beginnings of rich atmospheres. Falling between half-tuned dreams and stark, crystalline beauty, these songs are rich with warmth, shot into spacey terrain with tender eccentricity and otherworldly charm. Eddies voice is a hushed, tingling thing, rising on occasion from its gentle soul to a more sweeping majesty. Eddie Marcon’s tracks shouka by Eddie Marcon published on 2011-11-30T15:57:39Z slow na yume by Eddie Marcon published on 2011-11-30T15:49:26Z Nagekino Kame by Eddie Marcon published on 2011-11-30T09:44:35Z Atarashii Basyo by Eddie Marcon published on 2011-06-10T05:36:10Z Fuyu no hi by Eddie Marcon published on 2011-06-10T05:33:45Z Owari Hajimari by Eddie Marcon published on 2010-09-07T08:47:19Z Futari by Eddie Marcon published on 2010-09-07T08:46:26Z Kakurenbo by Eddie Marcon published on 2010-09-07T08:43:38Z Majan Sabaku by Eddie Marcon published on 2010-09-07T08:42:33Z Blues by Eddie Marcon published on 2010-09-06T17:27:36Z