Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Friday, 6 March 2026

Japan - Tin Drum (Half Speed Remaster)

The 2018 half-speed remaster of Japan's Tin Drum (Abbey Road/Universal) is widely praised by audiophiles for superior sound quality, featuring enhanced dynamics, tighter bass, and clearer, more detailed audio. Cut at 45 RPM across two vinyl discs, this edition is described as a significant improvement over original pressings, allowing listeners to hear hidden details in the mix. Reviews consistently highlight that the half-speed mastering offers a superior high-frequency response and a more stable, wider stereo image, resulting in a cleaner, more vibrant sound compared to streaming or older media. The 2-LP 45 RPM format allows for higher volume without sacrificing audio quality, offering greater presence and dynamic range. Tin Drum is regarded as a defining, art-pop masterpiece, characterized by its minimal,, synth-heavy, and rhythm-driven sound, heavily influenced by oriental musical textures. It was the final album from the original lineup of David Sylvian, Mick Karn, Richard Barbieri, and Steve Jansen.

Tin Drum was an album that announced big changes from the group with a more mature, haunting new groove beating at its heart. Classic Pop discovers how David Sylvian and co merged orientalism with high art to forge their final and most esoteric collection… 
Few musical journeys are as far-reaching and profound as the one taken by Japan between their first album in 1978 and their last in 1981.
Much is made of The Beatles’ evolution from the simplicity of Love Me Do to the avant-garde stylings of Revolution #9 in just six years, yet Japan travelled from the try-hard glam-pop of Adolescent Sex to the stark, desolate beauty of Ghosts in just three. At the time they recorded their final album singer David Sylvian was just 23 years old.
Japan released only five albums in their brief life, but only three that really matter. “I avoid looking back at the first two Japan albums,” Sylvian said later. “They were enormous mistakes that grew out of extraordinary circumstances. We were all young and surrounded by older people who thought they knew best.”
The first album that really announced to the world what Japan could and would be was 1979’s Quiet Life. It would be their Rubber Soul, a bold restatement of the band’s musical identity, courtesy of disco godhead Giorgio Moroder.
That creative journey continued on 1980’s Gentlemen Take Polaroids and reached its zenith on what would become the group’s final, and most acclaimed record, the haunting Tin Drum.
What’s especially perplexing is that this beguiling, elliptical record would be their best-selling album, and that its third single, the defiantly uncommercial Ghosts, would become their biggest hit. When Paul Morley described Tin Drum in the NME as “gorgeously erotic” and “perfectly evanescent” it didn’t sound as though he was talking about an LP that would make it to No.12 in the album chart.
Sometimes, it seems, the public is more discerning than they are given credit for.

Named after German writer Günter Grass’ 1959 novel The Tin Drum (Sylvian was never shy of showboating his highbrow tastes), Japan’s fifth album started recording on 22 June 1981, with producer Steve Nye at the helm. Just a month before, guitarist Rob Dean had left the band after six years, and his absence hangs over much of Tin Drum.
With his departure went the last vestiges of rock in Japan, and consequently much of the minimalist arrangements on the record come courtesy of Sylvian and keyboardist Richard Barbieri.
Whereas with previous long-players, Roxy Music and Bowie were the most obvious influences, the sounds that fed into Tin Drum were more esoteric.
Sylvian had been hanging out with Yellow Magic Orchestra’s Ryuichi Sakamoto and there’s definitely a Sakamoto vibe in the album’s silky Far Eastern textures, while Barbieri admitted in 1994 that the music of avant-garde controversialist Karlheinz Stockhausen had also bled into its recording.
“Especially the abstract electronic things he was doing in the late 50s,” Barbieri explained. “Listen to a track like Ghosts, for example, and you’ll hear all these metal-like sounds that hardly have a pitch, yet subconsciously suggest a melody.
”More than any other album, Tin Drum was Japan living up to their Eastern-sourced name, with the cover depicting the band’s breathlessly beautiful frontman eating rice from a bowl with chopsticks, in front of a peeling poster of Chairman Mao.
Then there are the songs Visions Of China (“We’re young and strong in this party/ We’re building our visions of China”) and Cantonese Boy (“Bang your tin drum/ Cantonese boy/ Red army calls you home”) in which Sylvian further explores his fascination with all things Oriental. 

The resulting sound on the album, dubbed ‘art school Orientalism’, was strikingly different to anything else around it at the time, in the charts or beyond.
Much has been made over the years of Japan being proto-New Romantics, but the truth is, there was never much of a crossover between Japan and the burgeoning New Romantic movement beyond a penchant for blusher.
“For them, fancy dress is a costume,” the singer said dismissively of the Blitz posse. “But ours is a way of life. We look and dress this way every day.
”The public may have thought they were being granted a taste of Japan’s next album with the April 1981 single release of The Art Of Parties, but the version that would turn up on Tin Drum was a rather different beast, shorn of its funky, new wave rhythms and given a more subtle, sensuous makeover.
It would prove typical of the LP, which seemed intent more on evoking a mood and a vibe than delivering chart-targeted melodies.

Japan: Tin Drum – The Recording

Crucially, Nye was unfamiliar with Japan’s work and decided, before he started the job, not to listen to any of their previous output. “As it turned out, I don’t think there would have been much to gain in this particular instance,” he told author Anthony Reynolds for the book Japan: A Foreign Place, “since Tin Drum was such a unique album and not really comparable, which I’m sure was the way Japan wanted it anyway.”
Even the recording of Tin Drum was markedly different to how Japan had worked before. The group found themselves living and recording at The Manor Studios, a stately manor house owned by Richard Branson, and located in the picturesque village of Shipton-on-Cherwell in Oxfordshire. 
“The Manor was residential, so we were together for meals and after work for a beer or two and a game of snooker, but usually tiredness would put you quickly to bed,” remembered Nye. 
“Unlike all their other albums where I spent most of the time in the control room, at the Manor there was tons to do if you weren’t recording,” added Nick Huckle, who was in charge of the band’s equipment. “Steve, Rich and I spent a lot of time playing snooker in the games room.
”With Rob Dean’s departure still fresh, and mounting commercial pressure from Virgin, the band knew the end was nigh.
“We started from the feeling that this would become our last album,” said bassist Mick Karn, who on previous albums had worked closely alongside Sylvian, but who absented himself for long periods during the recording of Tin Drum, “so we only did what we felt like ourselves. [It was] very spontaneous, and that put the frame for the whole album. That’s the strange thing about Tin Drum. It was made on instinct.”

“Making that album strained relations within the band considerably,’’ Sylvian recalled. “We were beginning to close off from one another, which meant that we couldn’t give musically to one another. There were differing ambitions, and I was at odds with the band.
”Relations between Sylvian and Karn were, if not hostile, then certainly not as warm as they had once been. Sylvian has been dismissive in the years since of Karn’s role in the making of the album, referring to the bassist’s participation as that of ‘a session musician’ during its recording.
The tensions were still there, it seems, at the time of the photography session for the album’s sleeve, with Karn claiming that the singer “arranged an alternative time for the session to begin”. A set of full band photos were shot, which Sylvian would later reject, on the basis that he didn’t like the clothes that either Karn or Barbieri were wearing.
In the end, the cover would feature Sylvian, sans band, in a photo taken by rock photographer Fin Costello on a set he’d been constructing for an Ozzy Osbourne shoot. All the props in the picture came from Costello’s kitchen, with the exception of the Mao print, which he’d bought in Chinatown for just 50 pence.

Japan: Tin Drum – The Reaction

When Tin Drum was released it won the band glowing reviews. In Smash Hits, writer David Bostock proclaimed that “Japan have made their best album yet” while Paul Morley in the NME wrote that “the music (un)moves with caressing precision” and that it “accepts transitoriness, yet delights in sensation.” The LP even won praise from fellow musicians, with Tears For Fears’ Roland Orzabal calling it “an absolute conceptual masterpiece from lyrics to artwork… just *everything*.”
It was to be the last hurrah though, with Japan finally calling it a day at the end of 1982, capping their career with one final live album, 1983’s Oil On Canvas. They reformed briefly under a new name in 1989 as Rain Tree Crow, producing just one eponymously-titled album.
It’s an intriguing ‘what if…’ to ponder what 80s pop would have looked like had Japan not decided to split. Tin Drum was so bold, so outré, so different to anything else before or since, that it’s impossible not to speculate where they would have gone next. The 1980s was a classic decade for music – its only real fault is that it didn’t have enough Japan in it. 

Japan: Tin Drum – The Songs

The Art Of Parties
This is a different version of the song than had been released earlier in 1981. One of Japan’s very best, it’s an arresting opener with its twittering synths and some fabulous bass work from Mick Karn. The slightly funkier 7” version of the song reached No.48 on the UK singles chart.
Talking Drum
A calmer track than The Age Of Parties, Talking Drum is typical of the album’s experimental ethos, as Sylvian sings, “I hear a voice, I hear a sound/ But nothing plays on my mind/ I take the car, I travel ‘round/ But nothing stays on my mind”. 
Ghosts
Not just one of Japan’s best songs, but one of the best songs of the 1980s. Yet for all Ghosts’ fragile beauty, it was a track that signalled the end of the band; “It was the only time I let something of a personal nature come through,” said David Sylvian, “and that set me on a path in terms of where I wanted to proceed in going solo.”
Canton
It wasn’t hard to hear the Ryuichi Sakamoto influence in this haunting, Asian-flavoured instrumental. There’s a celebratory feeling about Canton, and unlike so many album instrumentals, it feels integral to the overall architecture of the record. At one point, Talking Drum was considered as a single, with Canton as its B-side.
Still Life In Mobile Homes
Side B kicks off with this eccentric keyboard and drum-led number with Richard Barbieri on fine form. Sweetly melancholic, it’s topped with evocative lyrics from Sylvian: “The sound of wildlife fills the air/ So warm and dry/ The bushland burns in this southern heat/ Like an open fire.”
Visions Of China
Released as the album’s second single, Visions Of China hit a chart high of No.32 at the end of 1981. One of the LP’s poppier numbers, it’s still a significant step up from their earlier singles, with its electrifying mix of synths and analogue instrumentation. “Stay with me/ We could learn to fight,” Sylvian sings, “Like every good boy should/ Cling to me/ We are blacked out in visions of China.”
Sons Of Pioneers
This hypnotic, atmospheric number is one of Tin Drum’s standout tracks. At seven minutes-plus, it’s an epic piece, and one that you could imagine might have influenced Talk’s Talk’s Mark Hollis. Some have criticised the song for being too long, but its unhurried pace is perfectly in sync with the album’s meditative vibe.
Cantonese Boy
Released as the fourth single from Tin Drum, Cantonese Boy peaked at No.24 in May of 1982. Telling the story of the enlistment of a Cantonese boy to the Chinese Red Army (“Bang your tin drum/ Cantonese boy/ Civilian soldier”) it received mixed reviews on its release, with Smash Hits writing that it was “a good song”, but “can’t really be counted as much more than a stop-gap measure until the boys in rouge re-unite and pen something new.”

“Every track tells a story that we never knew about the stars of the 80s,” comments Mauro, “Their choice of song, and how it’s inspired them, reveals a side to each artists that we wouldn’t normally have seen.  Learning what moves and inspires the music makers themselves, and re-discovering those songs through each icon’s own distinctive style, has been magical.”

Japan - Gentlemen Take Polaroids (Half Speed Remaster)

In 1980 it was hard to know what the actual difference between Japan and Roxy Music was. Musically perhaps Mick Karn's fluttering wobbly bass lines added a dose of originality to Japan's music. Looks-wise Sylvian's bouffant was surely way more appealing to the touch than Ferry's lounge lizard quiff. Otherwise there's not a lot to separate them. Both paved the way for the exact sound that Duran Duran who, with a more rambunctious vocalist and more streamlined pretty boy looks, would take to the masses. Nick Rhodes must thank his lucky stars each day he heard this sound and saw this hair.
So by this point Japan was making elegant sleek pop that was already a mile away from their origins as a kind of glammed up English New York Dolls. The title track is a lovely example of what they were doing which is to take the sound of Roxy Music's stellar 'Same Old Scene' single and run with it. Like the following years 'Tin Drum', 'Gentleman Take Polaroids' is a mixed affair between unhurried clever funk pop and instrumental interludes that hark back to the records Brian Eno was making in the 70s.
Strangely, I'm perhaps thinking that Gentleman Take Polaroids has more to offer than Tin Drum. They are still being clever clogs but they haven't lost the sense of fun that led them to collaborate with Giorgio Moroder. They seem somehow less wankerish. Though I can't explain why they dipped into the Smokey Robinson song book so soon after their relatively successful 'I Second That Emotion'. 'Ain't That Peculiar' is just downright weird. A terrible mismatch. Like 'Tin Drum' there are moments that point forward to Sylvian's solo career. 'Here it's 'Nightporter' a beautiful piano led ballad that is way way above the standard of the rest of the LP.
Japan got better as they started playing fewer instruments and became less cluttery. Their career is like watching a band try to figure things out and by the time they got to where they want to be they'd split up. 'Gentleman Take Polaroids' is a fascinating part of that journey and contains some truly brilliant moments.   

Japan - Quiet Life

Quiet Life became a springboard to send Japan into radically bold new territory. The album followed its two predecessors in garnering very little interest in the UK, but Sylvian’s beautiful features, tight-fitting suits and elegant quiff had helped make them stars in the country that gave them their name.
The synthesizer fervour that gripped Britain in the wake of Kraftwerk and The Human League’s late-seventies output was particularly beneficial to Japan, who, seemingly overnight, ditched the platform boots and wild hair, refined their make-up, slowed down their sound to take in swirly synth textures and loping fretless bass, and emerged in 1979 with Quiet Life, an album that pushed the elegant, improbably-coiffed Sylvian into the limelight, aided and abetted by some of the band’s best songs, such as the pleasingly camp title track, the driving 'Fall In Love With Me', the ice-cold 'Despair' and a delightfully rigid take on the Velvet Underground classic 'All Tomorrow’s Parties'. Quiet Life deserves to be placed alongside Travelogue, Mix-Up and Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark as one of the key early British synth-based pop/rock albums, as it defined a very European form of detached, sexually-ambiguous and thoughtful art-pop, one not too dissimilar to what the ever-prescient David Bowie had delivered two years earlier with Low.

Japan - Obscure Alternatives

Their second album to hit the shelves in 1978, Japan's sophomore effort, Obscure Alternatives, found the band dropping most of their debut's funk fringe in favour of guitar-oriented fuzz and quirk -- scooping up the glitter left behind by all the scene's other nascent Siouxsie's and Adam Ants. Although the set isn't quite up to par with its predecessor, Obscure Alternatives is still a challenging listen. David Sylvian is snotty, snotty on "Automatic Gun" -- a spit-shined punk shocker backed by bright pop guitar -- and ironically playing into all the guises they eschewed. Both the wonderfully atmospheric and slightly menacing title track and "Love Is Infectious" put the band completely into discordant post-punk art house-dom, the latter including a twisted piano solo in the middle of the guitar crunch. "....Rhodesia," on the other hand, brought the funk back and infused it with a Caribbean essence. While there is no doubt that Obscure Alternatives paled in the shadow of Adolescent Sex, Japan had obviously, in their eyes, broken through to find their style, their groove. Still eons away musically from their more commercial Tin Drum heyday, the band were nevertheless cultivating a breath-taking crop of kernels.


Japan - Adolescent Sex

Japan were initially formed in 1974, but they only got to recording music after winning a talent contest, netting them a contract with Hansa Records. In 1978, they released two albums that were successful in Japan (the group's name probably helped), but which were basically over looked in the UK, because of the increasing popularity of the punk and new wave scenes. Initially, Japan weren't a new wave group (there are small tinges of the genre in their pre Quiet Life records, but that's more in the production and sound than the performance); they were a glam rock band with one hell of an attitude. I mean, this world is hardly as prude as it was in the 60's or 70's, but would you consider releasing an album titled Adolescent Sex now?
When it comes to the sound and scale of the music, Adolescent Sex is a glam rock album through and through, but what's interesting is how pissed off the group sounds. This is very well evidenced in David Sylvian's vocals, to be precise, he often seems to strain himself so as to deliver as much vocal raw power as any glam rock singer who has a lot of presence on stage, but he instead ends up in the zone between "subdued" and "powerful" that, in the case of this album, is actually more satisfying than if he actually crossed over into the latter.
In case I don't sound enthusiastic enough, I am seriously recommending you pick up Adolescent Sex. It (and its successor Obscure Alternatives) is a criminally overlooked piece of late-70's glam rock that undeservedly got swept up in the punk undercurrent. It's an outstandingly unique record, and 1978 definitely wasn't an uneventful year. OK, so I suppose the name could turn someone off… either that or the fact that it's the same group that released Gentlemen Take Polaroid’s... nah, you don't have any excuse not to pick this up.



Wednesday, 1 May 2019

Japan and SexBeat


Probably the most individual group from the 70’s London rock-scene, Japan were always keen on experimenting and “Life In Tokyo” caused mass confusion once again. At the beginning of 1979, the amazing news seeped through that the young rock-avantgardistes had met with an established disco-producer in an LA studio. That year’s winner of the "Oscar" and "Golden Globe" the one, the only Giorgio Moroder. Together they tinkered with a new song, in which the group digested the fresh impressions of a sensational live-concert in the Budokan Hall in Tokyo: "Life In Tokyo"."
A breakthrough single in many ways, this led to the "Quiet Life" album and greater UK success. There are a multitude of remixes and different sleeve variations of this song, what we have here is the 1980 reissue cashing in on Japan’s success.



Originally formed by BATCAVE DJ & Better Badges assistant guru, Hamish (guitars/vocals), la belle Sophie (bass), Linzi (drums) and the darling Max Edie (guitar/backing vocals), the band first supported the Meteors in the Lyceum in 1982. After losing Max the trio went on to play gigs at the Batcave, the Lyceum with The Gun Club, The Sisters of Mercy and the Stray Cats, Hammersmith Palais with Killing Joke, Gary Glitter(!?) and the Cramps (as well as a 1983 UK tour with the Cramps)...
The band recorded a track 'Sex Beat' for the Batcave album, 'Young Limbs Numb Hymns' in 1983 which became the radio-friendly and club track in the USA, particularly the west coast where Rodney Biggenheimer played it incessantly on KROC. Sex Beat sailed on unaware of this 'success' and eventually drifted apart in the malaise of post-batcave disillusionment.
However, 2009 saw the resurrection of that magic spark of bass and 'base' guitar at Club AntiChrist, and, armed with a batch of trademark songs, have persisted in bringing the mystic experience of passion and song to live audiences anywhere...
A band of bass and rhythm, bristling with raw guitars and bouncing with beat. Sex Beat create music for the body and mind, life and death, the naked and the dressed.