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Eternal Wind
Owen Chen
Label: OA2 Records
Released: 2026
Views: 870
Tracks
One Summer’s Day; The Dragon Boy; Carrying You; Mononoke Hime; Ashitaka and San; The Legend of Ashitaka; A Town with an Ocean View; My Neighbor Totoro; Path of the Wind.
Personnel
Owen Chen
guitarAndrew Cheng
guitar, electricCy Leo
harmonicaCole Palensky
saxophone, tenorCarlin Lee
pianoSean Hannon
bass, acousticAnton Kot
drumsAlbum Description
Every song on guitarist {{Owen Chen}}’s album Eternal Wind was written or co-written as part of a film score by Joe Hishaishi of Japan’s animation company, Studio Ghibli. “The music, stories and emotions we encounter as children stay with us,” Chen writes. “Eternal Wind aims to bring forth melodies that live in our past, with our modern-day musical voices and the rich history of jazz.”
To help breathe fresh life into Hishaishi’s music, Chen teams with a second guitarist, Malaysia-born {{Andrew Cheng}}, pianist {{Carlin Lee}}, bassist {{Sean Hannon}} and drummer {{Anton Kot}}, with appearances on three numbers each by tenor saxophonist {{Cole Palensky}} and harmonica player {{Cy Leo}} (together on “Carrying You”). Hishaishi’s themes are melodically strong and accessible, rhythmically tasteful and fluid, leaving ample space for diversity and improvisation.
Lee is especially secure in that framework, delivering a number of lucent and perceptive statements. Palensky and Leo also fare rather well, lending the core group luster and weight on “The Dragon Boy,” (Palensky), “Mononoke Hime” and “A Town with an Ocean View” (Leo) and “My Neighbor Totoro” (Palensky), as well as on “Carrying You.” The guitars, Chen and Cheng, basically run interference for the others, soloing rarely and moderately, as do Hannon and Kot.
It would be helpful if listeners were able to summon to mind the music of Studio Ghibli, but there is no way to know if anyone could. Divorced from that connection, Eternal Wind is a pleasant and well-played studio date, but no more than that.





