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    Three Blind Mice Supreme Collection 1500 | A Treasure Trove Of Music

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    Several years ago I purchased an album on a whim. It was by an artist named Yoshio Otomo on the Three Blind Mice record label. Nobody suggested I purchase this album. I still don't know why I took a chance on it, other than I absolutely love music. It was the best $25 I've ever spent on music. This album turned me on to a whole new world of Japanese jazz and the Three Blind Mice label. I've since been on a few obsessive missions over the years to find more TBM albums. 

     

    Three Blind Mice is a Japanese jazz label founded in 1970, and it's often called the Japanese Blue Note. The albums released on this label are nothing short of amazing. The music is great, the musicians are great, and the sound quality is great. What more can a music loving audiophile ask for? Of course, more music!

     

    Early in January 2020, I stumbled upon the Three Blind Mice Supreme Collection 1500. This is a collection of the "best" 40 albums ever released by TBM. The albums were reissued in 10 album batches late in 2019 by Craftman records and distributed through Japan's Disk Union. I immediately searched the internet and contacted everyone I know to figure out how to get these 40 albums. 

     

    I found a few of the albums available from a couple US outlets, but nothing close to the entire collection. I contacted Disk Union about shipping to the US. That was a no-go. CD Japan said it would ship to the US, but also lacked the entire collection. Then, I heard back from a representative of Craftsman Records. He connected me with a gentleman at Disk Union and arranged my purchase and shipment of the entire 40 CD collection! Last week the collection finally arrived. Wow, what a treat. 

     

    I've been listening to these albums nearly nonstop since their arrival. I have copies on my iPhone, in my Roon library, Aurender library, and a few others. Here's how I described my situation to a good friend via email, "This is like having a world class chef hand me dessert after dessert. Each album is fantastic in its own way."

     

    While I can't give a complete assessment of the 40 albums yet, I will list my current favorites and wish everyone the best of luck obtaining these amazing works of art. 

     

     


    Moon Ray.jpgYoshio Otomo Quartet with Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, Moon Ray (TBM-3007)

     

    This is the album that kicked it all off for me and it's still my favorite TBM release. One listen to the first track and I was hooked. Tamiko Kawabata's double bass opens the track, with Otomo's alto saxophone coming in shortly thereafter. Once Yamamoto joins in around the one minute mark, the track is off and running and the listen is past the point go no return. Once you've heard it, you'll want more.  

     

     

    Midnight Sugar.jpgTsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio, Midnight Sugar (TBM-23)

     

    Similar to how Moon Ray opens, Isoo Fukui starts it off with a deep double bass line, but this time Yamamoto enters this title track right away with some magical piano work. It's every so soft, but also features great transients and provides a very real sense of being in a jazz club. The entire album is pure magic.

     

     


    Misty.jpgTsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio, Misty (TBM-30)

     

    Tsuyoshi Yamamoto is the star of this show. And to think he was a self-taught pianist! There isn't a track on the album that I skip over. The sound quality is also fantastic, with a dynamic range score of DR 12. 

     

     

     

     

    Toki.jpgHidefumi Toki Quartet, Toki (TBM-46)

     

    This album features Hidefumi Toki on soprano saxophone with a band including a guitarist and at times an organist. It has a much different feel from the previous TBM albums on my list. A couple of the tracks have quite a bit going on, with the entire band hitting on all cylinders. Three of the five tracks are more about finesse and enabling a couple instruments such as Toki's sax and the bass to really shine. 

     

     


    Blow Up.jpgIsao Suzuki Trio, Blow Up (TBM-15)

     

    This album starts with an eerie feel on the track Aqua Marine, but it's terrifically eerie. Suzuki's cello, Sugano's electric piano, and Otsuka on percussion, weave a web of somewhat strange sounds that come together and sound wonderful on a HiFi system. The middle three tracks on the album are much more like traditional jazz, with a Japanese style. The last two go off in a different direction from anything previous on the album. It's all terrific stuff though. 

     

     


    Blues for Tee.jpgTsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio, Blues For Tee (TBM-41)

     

    I have to include this one because it would be a shame not to. It's the Tsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio again and it's much more typical music from this too than the Isao Suzuki Trio mentioned above. This is just another very solid jazz record that sounds great. 

     

     

     

     

    Green Caterpillar.jpgMasaru Imada Trio +2, Green Caterpillar (TBM-39)

     

    The first two tracks on this album are a bit off the wall, but in a really cool way. The opening track has an unmistakable psychedelic electric piano opening that may turn some traditionalist listeners off, but it's right up my alley. The rest of the band Kazumi Watanabe (guitar), Isao Fukui (bass), Tetsujiro Obara (drums), Yuji Imamura (percussion) are all as tight as can be. The entire album is great, with my favorite track, number three, Blue Impulse. This track starts like a more traditional jazz effort. Imada's beautifully soft piano solo for the first two minutes, followed by Fukui taking control on his bass. They all get together toward the middle of the track, then about 8:40 into the track Imamura lets lose on the drums for a wonderful, pounding, but brief solo. What a great album.

     

     

     

    Hino.jpgTerumasa Hino Quintet, Live! (TBM-17)

     

    One last album for the list. I was just in my car playing the entire 40 CD collection on shuffle, and I heard the Terumasa Hino Quintet album Live! (TBM-17) track titled Be and Now. What an amazing and eclectic piece of music. The album was recorded live at Yubin-Chokin Hall in Tokyo on June 2, 1973. This specific track is a "slow burn" but those with patience will be rewarded with some fabulous music, fabulous musicians, and fabulous sound quality. 

     

     

     

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    1 minute ago, jma2 said:

    Today I bumped into this (not so recent post):

    https://diskunion.net/jazz/ct/news/article/0/88856

     

    As far as my Japanese goes it would appear that a sequel to the supreme collection will start on 19th of August with 5 CDs per month for a total of 35, the first 5CDs listed on the page.

     

    But my Japanese could be wrong of course (then I blame Google translate 😉).

     

    Your understanding is correct. Thanks for sharing!

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    5 minutes ago, jma2 said:

    Today I bumped into this (not so recent post):

    https://diskunion.net/jazz/ct/news/article/0/88856

     

    As far as my Japanese goes it would appear that a sequel to the supreme collection will start on 19th of August with 5 CDs per month for a total of 35, the first 5CDs listed on the page.

     

    But my Japanese could be wrong of course (then I blame Google translate 😉).

    So cool!

     

    But, so hard to get!

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    I created an Amazon Japan account and ordered using the  CMRS-XX numbers from Seeteeyou's post. 

     

    4 of the 40 could not ship to the US but I have 36 on the way for about $15 each including shipping

     

    thanks to everyone for the info

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    found the other 4 here https://discsjapan.com/

     

    with shipping on just 4 it didn't get spread out as much so closer to $20 each but that makes all 40

     

     

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    https://discsjapan.com/

     

    just accepted my order for the 5 titles to be released mid-August. 

     

    Your Order Contains...

    Isao Suzuki & His Friends - Touch  4988044056190 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Mari Nakamoto - Little Girl Blue  4988044056237 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Masaru Imada Trio - Standard  4988044056206 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Shoji Yokouchi Quartet - Blonde On The Rocks  4988044056220 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Tsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio - Live In Montreux  4988044056213 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Subtotal: ¥7,500 JPY
    Shipping: ¥1,980 JPY
    Grand Total: ¥9,480 JPY
    Payment Method: PayPal

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    On 8/1/2020 at 10:53 PM, bbosler said:

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    https://discsjapan.com/

     

    just accepted my order for the 5 titles to be released mid-August. 

     

    Your Order Contains...

    Cart Items SKU Qty Item Price Item Total
    Isao Suzuki & His Friends - Touch  4988044056190 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Mari Nakamoto - Little Girl Blue  4988044056237 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Masaru Imada Trio - Standard  4988044056206 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Shoji Yokouchi Quartet - Blonde On The Rocks  4988044056220 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Tsuyoshi Yamamoto Trio - Live In Montreux  4988044056213 1 ¥1,500 JPY ¥1,500 JPY
    Subtotal: ¥7,500 JPY
    Shipping: ¥1,980 JPY
    Grand Total: ¥9,480 JPY
    Payment Method: PayPal

     

    Ordered them just now! Not bad for shipping to the US.

     

    Screen Shot 2020-08-05 at 11.43.13 AM.png

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    ordered 36 from Amazon Japan on Saturday and 8 arrived today. 24 more supposed to be here in the next week, and 4 on backorder. Pretty good !

     

    need ripping advice. I have always used iTunes but bought dbPoweramp based on a thread here,. It is having trouble finding the metadata. Some are OK but some just Kanji characters. So... just use iTunes which has found all 8 in English, or is there a better program ??

     

    thanks

     

     

    IMG_0440.jpg

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    mine did too !! but still waiting for the 4 from them that I couldn't get from Amazon Japan. 

     

     

     

     

    Screen Shot 2020-08-25 at 10.28.11 PM.png

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    10 hours ago, bbosler said:

    the September release of the next 5  is listed on Disk Union but don't see how to order to the US, may not be possible, and can't find them on Discs Japan where we got the last 5

     

    https://diskunion.net/jazz/ct/news/article/0/89601

     

    September releases:

     

    Shuko Mizuno'S Jazz Orchestra 73 (CMRS-0086)

    https://discsjapan.com/toshiyuki-miyama-the-new-herd-plus-all-star-guests-shuko-mizunos-jazz-orchestra-73/

     

    Masaru Imada Quartet - Now!! (CMRS-0087)

    https://discsjapan.com/masaru-imada-quartet-now/

     

    Isao Suzuki Quartet - All Right! (CMRS-0088)

    https://discsjapan.com/isao-suzuki-quartet-all-right/

     

    Toya Shigeko With The Imada Masaru Trio - S/T (CMRS-0089)

    https://discsjapan.com/toya-shigeko-with-the-imada-masaru-trio-s-t/

     

    Hideto Kanai - Concierto De Aranjuez (CMRS-0090)

    https://discsjapan.com/hideto-kanai-concierto-de-aranjuez/

     

     

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    Hi Guys, I started a thread for these albums and will try to list all the links to purchase etc... The idea is to have a central location and dedicated thread for the TBM Supreme Collection 1500:

     

     

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    2 hours ago, zerung said:

    If not already linked.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Blind_Mice_(record_label)

    The link mentions Recording Engineer Mr. Yoshihiko Kannari as being the key Engineer,

    Mr. Yoshiko Kannari is now independent and has his own label 'Studio Lion'

     

    In this link, Mr. Kannari talks about TBM and is association there. He also mentions FIM, Winston Ma and the relationship about Audiophile recording.

     

    Winston Ma who passed away in 2016, apart from being a Audiophile, had shops in HK and also produced huge number of Remastered Audiophiles CD's. Some of which are here. In Asia his FIM disk are Audiophile staple diet. His remastered disk of old jazz standards are arguably sonically superior. Please do look out for FIM, LIM labled discs also (Usually XRXD, SACD, etc).
     

    Thanks for the links. 
     

    I visited Winston at his home around 2009. He had the best listening room I’ve ever seen. 

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    What a wonderful resource... I've already started collecting SACDs by Tsuyoshi Yamamoto. Incredible music and recording quality!

     

    I was considering purchasing the Supreme collection... But I think I'd like to start with music that is similar to Tsuyoshi Yamamoto. For those that are familiar with the Supreme 1500 collection... Could you point me towards artists/albums that consist of only piano, bass, drums, that are vocal free?

     

    Thanks so much.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    I like the Terumasa Hino, Kohsuke Mine, and Teruo Nakamura titles (although the latter has a throwaway vocal track so bad as to be laughable). These all are a bit more '70's cutting edge than the Yamamotos. 

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    4 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

     

    I have all 100 Supreme Collection releases to date. Many are fantastic, but there certainly are some I'm not a fan of. 

     

    I would check out these, as a starting point, based on your interests. In no specific order.

     

    Isao Suzuki Trio - Black Orpheus

    Isao Suzuki Trio - Blow Up

    Isao Suzuki Quartet - Blue City

    Masaru Imaga & George Mraz - Alone Together

    Masaru Imaga Trio - Green Caterpillar

    Tsuyoshi Yamamoto - Midnight Sugar

    Tsuyoshi Yamamoto - Misty

    Yoshio Otomo Quartet - Moon Ray

    Thank you... SACDs ordered for all that were available. Bummer that none are available in multichannel.

     

    And why oh why are these artists not on streaming platforms. The world is missing out.

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    1 hour ago, 3dsoundshop said:

    And why oh why are these artists not on streaming platforms. The world is missing out.

    Agree. I've talked about this with the HDtracks team a bunch of times. They'd love to have Three Blind Mice as it's a favorite of David Chesky, but finding the right record label / rights holders who are willing to sign-off on allowing this, is impossible. My guess is that streaming is the same. 

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    10 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Agree. I've talked about this with the HDtracks team a bunch of times. They'd love to have Three Blind Mice as it's a favorite of David Chesky, but finding the right record label / rights holders who are willing to sign-off on allowing this, is impossible. My guess is that streaming is the same. 

     

    Since Chris brought this to our attention, they've probably made more selling CDs to this group than they would get from streaming in a lifetime  🙂

     

     

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    On 6/17/2020 at 10:36 PM, bernardl said:

    Btw, many of these amazing discs were released in different versions. Besides the SACDs I mentioned above, some of them were also released as XRCD24 and the sound quality is really outstanding. I am not sure whether the recent re-releases are based on the XRCD mastering.

     

    The are also other totally outstanding Japanese XRCD24, for example on the Master Music label.

     

    One that may be the very best I own is this disc by Mario Suzuki (now pretty expensive, a collector's favorite): https://www.amazon.co.jp/Masterpiece-Folklore-Music-Suzuki-2012-01-17/dp/B01K8KOZU2/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&qid=1592447527&refinements=p_32%3AMario+Suzuki&s=music&sr=1-1

     

    When 44.1/16 sounds this good you really wonder why people are worried about 192/24 or DXD. 🙂

     

    Cheers,

    Bernard

    Found the Mario Suzuki CD in a used CD/record shop yesterday... What incredible sound quality! Thanks so much for the suggestion.

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