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5 Reasons You Should Listen to 'Sky Fish Fly' by kazaizen

  • Louise Clark
  • 29 minutes ago
  • 2 min read

Sky Fish Fly isn’t the kind of album that reveals itself all at once, it’s the kind you sink into, gradually noticing how its details shift and shimmer over time. Jonny Kasai’s kazaizen project thrives on curiosity and texture, blending genres into something fluid and immersive. If you’re wondering what makes it worth your time, here are five compelling reasons to press play and stay with it.


1. It bends genres without losing focus

Rather than hopping between styles, Sky Fish Fly dissolves the boundaries between them. Psychedelic rock, alternative soul, experimental pop, and touches of synth-jazz all coexist in a way that feels natural, not forced. It’s a masterclass in integration rather than juxtaposition.


2. The grooves are hypnotic and constantly evolving

Tracks like “Nanoo Nanoo” and “Make It Love” lock into rhythms that feel almost meditative, but they’re never static. Subtle shifts in instrumentation and texture keep the listener engaged, rewarding close attention.


3. It reimagines nostalgia in a fresh way

Songs like “What Is” and “What’s the Meaning – Self” draw from 70s soul and city-pop, but they’re filtered through warped, lo-fi production and collage-like structures. The result isn’t retro—it’s something dreamlike and slightly disorienting.


4. It balances experimentation with emotional warmth

Even at its most abstract, the album never feels cold. There’s a consistent sense of soulfulness—through melody, tone, and atmosphere—that grounds the more exploratory elements and makes the listening experience inviting.


5. It rewards repeat listens

This isn’t background music. Each spin reveals new layers—hidden textures, subtle transitions, unexpected details. The album’s fragment-based construction means there’s always something new to notice, making it a record that grows with you over time.


"With Sky Fish Fly, kazaizen invites listeners on a journey through sound that’s playful, introspective, and utterly fearless,” says music publicist Danielle Holian, Decent Music PR. “Jonny Kasai blends psychedelic soul, shoegaze, jazz, and city pop into a universe where every track feels alive, like flipping through a cosmic radio dial at midnight. It’s music that’s lo-fi, immersive, and impossible to categorise, but impossible to forget.”
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