Akiyoshi Yasuda dismantles conventional meter in “day4” to let ambient sound exist as an unanchored object in space. The music operates without a fixed tempo, allowing fragments of sound to drift to the surface. This structural absence strips the composition of a clear beginning or end. Instead of a progressing timeline, the track replicates the gradual, imperceptible shifts found in daily routines, turning an ordinary block of time into an archive.
The central choice rests on a total rejection of the traditional song form. By abandoning standard meter, the composition establishes a physical space where sounds remain present rather than moving toward a predictable resolution. The project functions as a literal memento, a small keepsake holding faint memory fragments that surface without a defined sequence. The notes do not build toward a climax; they persist as artifacts.
This focus on unmapped progression aligns with the generative sequencer and sampler experiments shared on his Instagram account @akiyoshiyasudaselfish. The audio-reactive framework relies on these small, accumulating variations rather than human performance cues. The final elements alter their shape by tiny degrees, trailing off before the ear marks a definitive boundary.






