Fukushima (2023) is my upcoming 2nd album - here's a little teaser of how it will sound. It tells the story of 1 day in Japan in 2011, during the earthquake. Will be ready in a few weeks and available on all major streaming platforms + RU-vid :) Check out my other music on Spotify: open.spotify.com/artist/6bQsCHPVmEPZvQ7UVut844?si=egZpPqFOQTq7E3youqmWOA
oweeeeeeeee bro your gonna big bro i seen channels grow in a matter of time,dedication, and posting frequently good stuff.I'm new and here to support you
I was one of the first responders (American or Japanese) to the 2011 Fukushima Earthquake. I'll never not be proud of the work we did there. I'll be interested to see how the album turns out.
Hey man, just want to say, I've been listening to your album Silver Spring for quite some time now, it never fails to put me at peace. I can't wait to see your new work. You actually brought me into ambient music, so thank you for that!
The concept reminds me a lot to another album release called "9.0水面下Megathrust". It's in Bandcamp, and I have chills every time I listen to it. I think it portraits what happened in Fukushima in those moments. Exactly as your concept, but probably a different take on the sound. Really neat stuff. Will listen to it once it arrives for sure!
I like to believe this will be the Hitman: Contracts of Podel's albums: dark and gritty. Also, check out his previous albums! Suburban Memory is amazing and so is Silver Spring.
i remember some years back maybe 2013, i was walking across the coastline of a place we we're staying at in oregon and found tons of trash and garbage, almost all of them had japanese inscriptions on it and we even found someones notes that we're dated the day of the accident.
Hope this video brings attention to a severe problem regarding Fukushima decontamination - there are many problems that Japanese experts are concerned about, but the govt is ignoring them and pushing ahead with releasing contaminated water. Japanese regulators used flawed methods for testing to deem the water safe. Out of risk factors that combine the activities of more than 60 radioactive contaminants, Japan regularly tested only a small subset of these radioactive contaminants - seven to 10 of them, including tritium. Only roughly a quarter of the more than 1,000 tanks at the site have been analyzed. Combined with the large variability among tanks, this means that final dilution rates for tritium and the cleanup necessary for all contaminants are not well known. Japan's focus on tritium also neglects the fact that the nontritium radionuclides are generally of greater health concern as evidenced by their much higher dose coefficient. For such a significant and wide-reaching decision for everyone in the Pacific rim, Japan's decision-making had been sloppy and in haste. Objectively concerning. Source: "More data needed before ocean release of Fukushima water," Japan Times
there is no one else i would want to tackle the world's worst nuclear tragedy since chernobyl than a wealthy british man with absolutely no cultural or societal connections to the place where it happened