Ichiko Aoba’s Luminescent Creatures is a Breathtaking, Lucid Dream
On her ninth album, the Japanese folk artist works in the granular, aurally ornamenting her melodies in ways made striking from the silence that surrounds them.

In October 2024, Japanese folk artist Ichiko Aoba, robed in snow-white garments and backed by a nine-piece band, took the Hitomi Memorial stage at Showa Women’s University in Tokyo. To the sold-out Japanese crowd, the show was exactly as expected. After over a decade of breathtaking performances and high-profile collaborators with some of the country’s most illustrious musicians, the 35-year-old had built a national reputation as a sonic painter of few equals. Performances that she had once held solo, however, had graduated into sumptuous audiovisual feasts replete with custom-made props, unique lighting and themed costuming.
After a litany of recognizable tunes—many from Aoba’s previous record, 2020’s Adan no Kaze—she took to uncharted waters, debuting songs heard by few outside of herself, recent collaborator Taro Umebayashi and the performers on stage. The show’s climax arrived via “Luciférene,” a composition outlined by flurries of piano and colored in with harp, violin and flute. Overhead, veins throbbing with prismatic light momentarily cast the auditorium in the glowing innards of some diaphanous celestial being. Aoba, in her crystalline vocal tone, ruminated on the ancestral nature of that light within herself and her audience. “Here, life can be found,” she sang in her native tongue, “from long before words were ever born.”
Though Japan has long known about Ichiko Aoba and her gifts for spinning beauty out of quietude, it wasn’t until 2018, when qp received a release in Western markets, that an international audience finally started to remember her name. Such an audience might not be aware that the multi-instrumental lushness of Adan no Kaze (released in the US as Windswept Adan) was comparatively maximalist to the solitary classical guitar and voice that, from 2010’s Kamisori Otome onward, demonstrated how Aoba could evince that gift with the barest of tools.
It turns out you can never truly go back home; on Luminescent Creatures, Aoba doubles down on the grandeur with a record that’s even more accessible, and perhaps even more thematically cohesive than its direct predecessor. The link is so direct, in fact, that it shares its title with the final song of Windswept Adan. Their settings are also contiguous—both are filled with portrayals of islands and oceans, hills and towers, human inhabitants and superhuman entities. But where Adan’s opener, the murky pump-organ-led “Prologue,” rolled in slow as fog, Luminescent Creatures’ “COLORATURA” gives way almost immediately to Umebayashi’s cascading keys, Junichiro Taku’s skyward flute trills and Aoba’s ethereal breathwork. The song prefaces an altogether lighter-hued, but no less absorbing album of songs inspired by the geographical splendor of the Ryukyu Archipelago south of Japan’s mainland. Adan’s forests and fog come across as claustrophobic compared to Luminescent Creatures’ open air and sky.
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