by Charles SpanoUsing a computer like a DJ uses a turntable, Nobukazu Takemura samples instruments from piano to vibraphone, and adds bouncy beats and even speech-synthe vocals to create a retro-futuristic playland. On 10th, Takemura focuses on bright and playful sound collages that bear resemblance to the vibe of Air, the style of Tortoise, and Mouse on Mars' use of instruments as opposed to computer-generated sounds. Machine's Dream is a jaunty, robot fantasy come to life. A Puff of Word ticks, scatters, and gurgles like a groovy, toy factory assembly line. On Lost Treasure, Takemura proves he can make synthetic vocals sing -- the voice is not from a vocoder, speech-synthe technology was developed to help people with certain disabilities communicate more easily. 10th is a record that is sometimes ambient (Mumble), sometimes built on simple, uplifting loops (Cons), and sometimes even constructed around driving rhythms (Perch) -- but the album is always fantastical and innocent, a meeting of magic and technology.