What top 10s are weirder than Ghosts, except O Superman, of course...
― iago g., Friday, 1 October 2010 00:40 (fifteen years ago)
I marvel at UK pop culture, such a mash of MASSIVE artists and (presumably) inaccessible artists, completely different than the US mainstream. Never change!
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 1 October 2010 00:55 (fifteen years ago)
"Ghosts", in particular, has to be one of the dullest Top 10 Hits EVER.Couldn't disagree more..
Couldn't disagree more..
Yeah no kidding, this song is fucking incredible.
― ilxor has truly been got at and become an ILXor (ilxor), Friday, 1 October 2010 02:34 (fifteen years ago)
amazing!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGcteC2_H2c
― Kim, Friday, 1 October 2010 02:54 (fifteen years ago)
I am so big on Tin Drum, Gentlemen Take Polaroids & Quiet Life...I tried their first two albums over five years ago & they didn't hit me in the same way. I am thinking I should try them again.
― Mormons come out of the sky and they stand there (Abbbottt), Friday, 1 October 2010 02:56 (fifteen years ago)
I am thinking I should try them again.
Eh, I'm in the same camp as you. Their first two, which I revisited last year, are simply a different band, and not one that I particularly like.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 1 October 2010 03:01 (fifteen years ago)
You have to approach their first albums as a diff band, basically. "Adolescent Sex" is pretty bratty, but has a few standout moments if you like glam rock. I like a lot of "Obscure Alternatives" - its all over the place, its quite an odd little number.
I'vbe had a Japanese original pressing of AS since I was 16, I feel like I grew up with this band even tho they'd broken up before I ever found out about them.
― cathedral-sized jellyfish in your mind (Trayce), Friday, 1 October 2010 03:01 (fifteen years ago)
Haha xpost!
― cathedral-sized jellyfish in your mind (Trayce), Friday, 1 October 2010 03:02 (fifteen years ago)
Yep, that's the right perspective.
Meanwhile, don't forget the reunion-that-wasn't-quite album as Rain Tree Crow. It's haunting.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 1 October 2010 03:27 (fifteen years ago)
i've never heard a japan song in my life other than "ghosts" but that song more than justifies their existence for me
― teledyldonix, Friday, 1 October 2010 04:09 (fifteen years ago)
obscure alternatives is a great record. I prefer it at times to gentlemen take polaroids which can sound bland to me, compared to tin drum (which is texturally interesting) and quiet life (which still has some swagger to it). obscure alternatives is weird. I think it's weirder than polaroids.
― akm, Friday, 1 October 2010 07:04 (fifteen years ago)
Its quite weird! It has this strange harsh vibe to it. "Communist China" is such a Roxy rip, but it's great for it.
― cathedral-sized jellyfish in your mind (Trayce), Friday, 1 October 2010 08:06 (fifteen years ago)
early 80s synth based music hasn't and will never date
I love 80s synth-pop but this is a crazy statement. Certain voguish sounds were already dated a couple of years later.
― Haunted Clocks For Sale (Dorianlynskey), Friday, 1 October 2010 08:10 (fifteen years ago)
The sound of the 80s was intermediately dated during the 90s, but has been reinstated during the 00s. The 90s was a very different decade that will remain different forever and have little relevance on music beyond the 90s.
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Friday, 1 October 2010 08:52 (fifteen years ago)
Amazing.
― Haunted Clocks For Sale (Dorianlynskey), Friday, 1 October 2010 08:53 (fifteen years ago)
Some of the sampling/FM based synths of the late 80s sound dated now though, and always will. The trademark bass sound of the DX7 will never ever be trendy again.
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Friday, 1 October 2010 08:53 (fifteen years ago)
wow i agree with Geir, whats the world coming too
On sounding dated i think its to do with digital synths in the 80s and cheap sampling in the late 80s/early 90s
― X-101, Friday, 1 October 2010 09:48 (fifteen years ago)
Yes, it is. But also some of those DX7 sounds that were being used way too often.
The DX7 (and the FM synths that followed) was a strange creature. Technically, it was a synth and not a sampler. But the sounds it made sounded more like badly sampled samples than like synth sounds. Avoiding the most cliche-liked sounds (also the el piano sound) FM synths can still work nicely together with analogue synths to create more varied sounds though.
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Friday, 1 October 2010 09:50 (fifteen years ago)
But, well.... Better keep to Japan here. And they did not use DX7 or samples. :)
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Friday, 1 October 2010 09:51 (fifteen years ago)
I have to agree with Geir here about early 80s synth before everything got all poopy. However Japan are so depressing! Were then and are now! Am happy to be reminded of this.
― Party with Your Poodle (u s steel), Friday, 1 October 2010 10:04 (fifteen years ago)
It's Sylvian's Ferryesque croon on the Japan records that I have a hard time coming to terms with. Thankfully he mostly dropped that affectation when he went solo. I love "Ghosts" and (even more) "Nightporter" but he should have redone the vox on those songs later.
― margana (anagram), Friday, 1 October 2010 12:16 (fifteen years ago)
I always thought "Burning Bridges" felt like a sort of practice run for what they wanted to do on "Ghosts," except with a saxophone instead of some crushingly bleak lyrics.
― Mormons come out of the sky and they stand there (Abbbottt), Friday, 1 October 2010 17:15 (fifteen years ago)
Sylvian re-recorded the vocals for "Ghosts" on the "Everything & Nothing" compilation.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 1 October 2010 19:03 (fifteen years ago)
Is that worth checking out? FWIW I *love* the vocals on original flavor Ghosts.
― Mormons come out of the sky and they stand there (Abbbottt), Friday, 1 October 2010 19:04 (fifteen years ago)
it's a good compilation that criminally doesn't include any version of forbidden colors. the re-recordings and remixing isn't super noticable unless you are the sort who a/b tests versions of songs obsessively. I'm not sure why he did it.
― akm, Friday, 1 October 2010 22:32 (fifteen years ago)
Partly because early 80s synth based music hasn't and will never date.
"I still like it" doesn't mean it hasn't dated. I like a lot of music played on the harpsichord but guess what it's dated. I know it is useless to argue w/you but I feel it is my duty to tell you you're wrong.
― aerosmith: live at gunpoint (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Friday, 1 October 2010 22:46 (fifteen years ago)
Except for the drum machines being more advanced these days, current chartpop sounds like early 80s synth based music.
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Saturday, 2 October 2010 20:47 (fifteen years ago)
(And, well, today's chart pop is dominated by female singers whereas male ones dominated in the 80s - but it would be a bit weird to claim that the idea of a male lead singer is dated)
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Saturday, 2 October 2010 20:48 (fifteen years ago)
Oh man akm thank you for reminding me of "Forbidden Colors"! I had been trying to figure out what it was for the past couple months, playing "Every Color You Are" and getting sad when it wasn't the song I was thinking of.
― Mormons come out of the sky and they stand there (Abbbottt), Saturday, 2 October 2010 21:54 (fifteen years ago)
People who dislike Japan just have no...taste.
― Ain't Gonna Play Sim City (King Boy Pato), Saturday, 2 October 2010 21:57 (fifteen years ago)
Speaking of taste:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mxr3B1rNHGc
― Ain't Gonna Play Sim City (King Boy Pato), Saturday, 2 October 2010 21:59 (fifteen years ago)
One of my fave bands evah...Probably the only band I would pay good money to see if they reformed...love the early stuff...Adolescent Sex is so funky...Karn and Jansen are one of the best rhythm sections this country produced...if they were American I reckon Miles Davis would have picked them up...
― sonnyboy, Saturday, 2 October 2010 22:50 (fifteen years ago)
So sad about Karn's cancer :(
― cathedral-sized jellyfish in your mind (Trayce), Saturday, 2 October 2010 23:35 (fifteen years ago)
"sometimes i feel so low" is GOOD
― reggie (qualmsley), Monday, 7 January 2019 14:36 (seven years ago)
― Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Friday, October 1, 2010 1:52 AM (eight years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i love this post
― jolene club remix (BradNelson), Monday, 7 January 2019 16:42 (seven years ago)
You love that post because its terrible?
I always had this band down as the worst example of New Romantic pretentiousness/preciousness/ponciness but "gentlemen take polaroids" and "tin drum" are excellent albums
Like Eno if he stayed with Roxy Music and a bit of Bowie coke mirror art-funk thrown in for good measure. the musicianship is incredible
"art of parties" is my jam lately
― . (Michael B), Monday, 7 January 2019 17:38 (seven years ago)
the Mao chic is a bit much
― Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 7 January 2019 17:46 (seven years ago)
Doesn't Sylvian look like Sally Jesse Raphael on that cover?
he really does
― . (Michael B), Monday, 7 January 2019 18:02 (seven years ago)
“The Art of Parties” is GREAT. One of my favorite songs on the entire Just Can’t Get Enough New Wave Hits of the 80s series.
― Mr. Snrub, Monday, 7 January 2019 20:40 (seven years ago)
Love Japan, especially Quiet Life and Tin Drum which are all time favorites.
Recently acquired the 2xLP reissue of the ambient albums Sylvian did with Holger Czukay (which I'd somehow never heard before this reissue) and it's pretty much all I want to listen to right now. You can really hear in this the tracks being laid for the Sylvian solo records that follow
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 7 January 2019 23:06 (seven years ago)
Abbot's Yes related dn name from 8 years ago just made raspberry ginger wine come out of my nose.
― MaresNest, Monday, 7 January 2019 23:26 (seven years ago)
My jam:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=to-e3eFcHgg
― Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 7 January 2019 23:46 (seven years ago)
Why does Japan have such a horrible reputation? It's primarily outside of England that this is the case. I remember Blender mag foolishly declaring them one of the worst bands of all time in the early 2000s. Look at this thread title: YES, of course they were. The most innovative band in the world for a short while in the early 80s. And they were popular at the time!
When did the backlash happen? Was it just that the band had a very new wavey 1980s aesthetic and was subsequently misjudged and tossed in with the more processed bands of the time?
― Totally different head. Totally. (Austin), Tuesday, 8 January 2019 00:02 (seven years ago)
https://i.ibb.co/vZc91pF/viz.jpg
― visiting, Tuesday, 8 January 2019 00:20 (seven years ago)
― Totally different head. Totally. (Austin)
uh well they had no American reputation at all unless you read Trouser Press or some shit
― Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 8 January 2019 00:40 (seven years ago)
Japan didn't have a particularly great reputation in the UK on their first couple of albums, as it happens. In fact, it took them until Gentlemen Take Polaroids to finally get the recognition they deserved in the UK. They were completely out of step with what was going on at the time in the UK on Adolescent Sex. On the other hand, Quiet Life was a little ahead of its time - it performed poorly on the chart and the title track was only a hit when it was reissued about a year and a half after the album had been out. It sounds like proto-Duran Duran now, but the UK hadn't caught up with what they were doing yet. By the time they'd truly cracked it critically and commercially with 'Ghosts' and Tin Drum, they were finished. To the casual observer in the UK, it must have seemed like they were here today and gone tomorrow, even though they were big in Japan from the beginning. You have to remember, the Quiet Life to Tin Drum period wasn't really that long a period of time, and by the time Japan called it quits, Duran Duran had arrived with a far more accessible (although admittedly not as good - bar Rio) take on what Japan were doing - and they were better looking and more willing to play the fame game.
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Tuesday, 8 January 2019 01:16 (seven years ago)
It's true that Japan's reputation has only increased with time, though - I still remember seeing the video for 'Visions of China' on MTV in the '90s! There was a lot of "the '80s were crap and the music sucked" talk in the '90s, which I basically put down to that natural thing of there being nothing that seems as uncool as things from the previous decade. That kinda perception got readjusted in the '00s, and then further this decade.
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Tuesday, 8 January 2019 01:24 (seven years ago)
I was reading pro-Japan articles in the early '90s, in the throes of my Ferry obsession.
― Your sweetie-pie-coo-coo I love ya (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 8 January 2019 01:27 (seven years ago)
Yup. Japan seemed more immune to the '90s backlash against "'80s music" than most. They'd also got back together to do the Rain Tree Crow album in '91, which I'm really glad didn't come out as a Japan album because it's a different thing.
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Tuesday, 8 January 2019 01:33 (seven years ago)
Bumping this thread to post a link to this recent interview with Rob Dean:
http://www.electricityclub.co.uk/missing-in-action-rob-dean/
― Dee the (Summer-Hating) Lurker (deethelurker), Tuesday, 18 June 2019 18:26 (six years ago)