WHERE MUSIC LISTENS TO YOU

Scarcity Part 1: Yellow Magic Orchestra Live In London

Posted about 1 year ago

Sometimes I stay awake at night worrying about the important stuff in life, things like: do the Japanese have heritage acts? I'll sleep easily tonight; they do!

Exhibit A: The Sadistic Mika Band. In the mid-70s they moulded an obsession with Roxy Music, David Bowie and shopping on the King's Road into a delightful output of songs that often included "boogie" in the title. They went through seven variations before calling it a day. But a quick search on YouTube shows them back at it in 2003 and again in 2006. Is this relevant to my story? It is for their drummer Yukihiro Takahashi. He was - is - also a member of…

Exhibit B: Yellow Magic Orchestra. Yes, Yukihiro drums in two heritage acts, plus he's a solo artist - that's one better than Phil Collins! YMO don't have song titles with "boogie" in them; their most obvious influence is Deutsche knob twiddlers Kraftwerk. Except for one album. By 1983 it was plain that being arty and singing in English wasn't going to make them a major act, so they did a cool album of cheeky J-pop and cleaned up. They called it 'Bad Boys'. Then film directors knocked on poster boy Ryuichi Sakamoto's door and a few high-profile film soundtracks later YMO was just an entry in their musical resumes. But after twenty years to temper their mutual dislike they played at Live Earth and again last year. Did they complete their ascendancy to heritage godocracy? Check the global library that is YouTube and, yes they did; they made a Kirin Beer commercial.

Just look at this photo. Do they look like a heritage act to you?

Of course it does! Three grumpy old men having to stand next to each other for publicity.

They're not topping up the pension fund by actually touring though. Asked by Massive Attack to play at the Meltdown Festival at Royal Festival Hall, they're managing one other gig in Spain. That's it for Europe.

The three of them spanned the stage, standing behind small instrument arrays. Behind them were three supplementary musicians working laptops, downing them to play heavily treated guitar and mandolin, and flugelhorn. They didn't talk. To each other or the audience. Black clothes and silver hair, black synths and silver MacBooks….it looked cool.

In a situation like this, there's always the possibility that the evening will be a wallow in nostalgia. Not here. The songs were from all over the back catalogue, run through a blender of what's tickling their current artistic itch. Basically, they're into static and pre-Cambrian sounding electronic music sounds, layering them into and over the music. At times it clashed and at times it flowed, at times you wanted them to stop (now!) and at times it sounded very special. Where some of the music pieces originally were quite repetitious, now the rich texture of sound often progressed in micro-variations that made me think someone has Terry Riley's 'Rainbow In Curved Air' in Most-Played on the i-Pod.

Playing "Riot In Lagos" in 2007

Each of the trio had moments of musical bravura, but for me the starlight of the night was Yukihiro. Halfway through he moved from his electronics to a drum kit, proving to be a snapping funk drummer. But on one of the dancier numbers, besides the bootylicious beat, throughout the song he kept moving the snare beat around so that by song's end he'd put a pattern on every beat in the bar. Phil Collins would be jealous.

Check out Yukihiro's chops on this cultural collision: YMO on 'Soul Train' in 1980 doing a unique interpretation of "Tighten Up".

Comments (9)

  1. Misstee says

    Just the fact they even appeared on Soul Train makes me love them all the more!

    Permalink posted 06/25/2008
  2. Mike the Knife says

    Ha! Don Cornelius, you slicker: "The Yellow Magic Orchestra!" Not a Yellow Magic Orchestra. The Yellow Magic Orchestra. Otherwise, great reportage, Jonh. As you know, I'm a major Sadistics and YMO fan, so there might be a bit of jealousy at this end. Still, happy to see that killer clip of "Riot In Lagos" - and the beer ad, too.

    Permalink posted 06/25/2008
  3. ivylander says

    And that they had the guts to play "Tighten Up"! Wow. And is that a Wolfman Jack sample? They may be the coolest band on earth....

    By the way, is it just me, or was Don Cornelius extremely stoned? And why did I never notice this the first time around? (Wait, don't answer that...)

    Permalink posted 06/25/2008
  4. fistula spume says

    Giant YMO fan here.  In fact I love all their side projects.  Especially love the left out Haruomi Hosono.  That guy was in Happy End which was the first major Japanese group in the early 70's to chuck the idea of singing in English and they made it popular there.  These guys have more threads with needles in them stuck in so many groups and people around the world.  Yukihiro and Hosono also formed Sketch Show in this decade which I still have not gotten anything by.  I would kill to go to a YMO concert.  Kill I tells ya!

    Permalink posted 06/25/2008
  5. contrabandwidth says

    Well color me befuddled.  Over there you'll see the turnip truck I just fell off of.  This earth you speak of - it has many different cultures, all re-interpreting American and British Pop Culture in its own way?  Wow.  Thsi was completely off my radar, thanks!

    Permalink posted 06/25/2008
  6. FluxCapacitor says

    That was an education, ta. I wasn't sure what a heritage act was never mind a/the Yellow Magic Orchestra. The beer ad was rather bizarre but it was good to see the stars actually drink the beverage they're hawking.

    Permalink posted 06/26/2008
  7. ivylander says

    When I see the Shang Shang Typhoon reunion tour, I'll be sold on the Japanese heritage act phenomenon....

    Permalink posted 06/26/2008
  8. Jonh Ingham says

    Ivy, Shang Shang Typhoon is a favourite of the 12 year old. I'm not sure the Shangs have ever broken up - time to check the YouTube library.

    Permalink posted 06/26/2008
  9. ivylander says

    Gads, I think you're right! (Not that there's any surprise in that.) I was taking my cue from a somewhat cryptic Wikipedia entry that described them as "a Japanese band of the 1980s and 1990s." It did mention their being signed to an indie label, which muddled things a bit. A minimal Google establishes that they seem to have disbanded for a few years in the Nineties but reformed. There is a 2001 entry in their discography, then seemingly nothing more until 2006. A highly mysterious group....

    Permalink posted 06/26/2008

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