Yellow Magic Orchestra (album): Difference between revisions
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!align="left"|Chart (1980) |
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!align="center"|Peak position<ref>{{cite web|title=Yellow Magic Orchestra: Billboard Singles|publisher=[[Allmusic]]|url=http://www.allmusic.com/artist/yellow-magic-orchestra-p5886/charts-awards/billboard-singles|accessdate=2011-05-25 |
!align="center"|Peak position<ref>{{cite web|title=Yellow Magic Orchestra: Billboard Singles|publisher=[[Allmusic]]|url=http://www.allmusic.com/artist/yellow-magic-orchestra-p5886/charts-awards/billboard-singles|accessdate=2011-05-25}}</ref> |
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|align="left"|[[UK Singles Chart]]<ref name="chartstats_game">{{cite web|title=Computer Game (Theme From 'the Invaders')|work=chartstats.com|url=http://www.chartstats.com/release.php?release=8684|accessdate=2011-05-28}}</ref> |
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Revision as of 20:30, 30 May 2011
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Yellow Magic Orchestra is the first album by Japanese electronic music band Yellow Magic Orchestra. Originally released in Japan in 1978, the album was re-released in the United States the following year with new cover art and without the closing track of "Acrobat". Both would later be re-issued in 2003 as a double-disc format, with the American version as the first disc.
Overview
The album was intended to be a one-off project for producer and bass player Haruomi Hosono and the two session musicians he had hired: drummer Yukihiro Takahashi and keyboard player Ryuichi Sakamoto. The trio were to recreate Martin Denny's 1959 exotica tune "Firecracker" with modern electronics, as a subversion of the exoticisation and Orientalism of the original tune, along with various original compositions also exploring themes of Asianness, exoticisation and Orientalism from a Japanese perspective.[1] The album also featured the use of a computer in conjunction with a synthesiser, as part of music production, to create a new sound that, according to Billboard Magazine was not possible until then.[2] The album would eventually be called Yellow Magic Orchestra, as a satire of Japan's obsession with black magic at the time.[1] The project proved highly popular, culminating in a career for the three musicians; one that would last until 1983, before successful solo careers and reunions over the decades to come.
Both "Computer Game" tracks proper contain the same audio and were made to sound as if both games were being played in the same room; each track being from the perspective of its titular arcade game unit: Circus and Space Invaders. Both Circus and Space Invaders, along with several other popular arcade video games, were also featured in the promotional film for "Tong Poo".
The titles for several songs on the B-side are based on Jean-Luc Godard film names. “Tong Poo” is the Cantonese title for Le Vent d'est. “La Femme Chinoise” is La Chinoise with “femme” (the French word for “woman”) added after the feminine definite article “la.” Finally, “Mad Pierrot” is an English translation of 気狂いピエロ ([Kichigai Piero] Error: {{nihongo}}: text has italic markup (help)), the title under which Pierrot le fou was released in Japan.
Release history
The album was first released in Japan in 1978. It was released in the US on 30 May 1979 by A&M Records on the Horizon label with a new mix by Al Schmitt, new cover art and a slightly different track listing. This "US version" was subsequently released in Japan on 25 July 1979 by Alfa. Promotional A&M copies were pressed on yellow vinyl.
"Firecracker" was released as a single under the name "Computer Game". As such, on early US pressings of the album, "Computer Game 'Theme from The Circus'" and "Firecracker" were combined as one track, while the firecracker sound effect at the end of the track was indexed by itself as "Firecracker". This was corrected on later pressings. US pressings also featured a more American-friendly mixing (highlighting a punchier equalization and heavy use of reverb.) Several of the segues on the second side of the album were edited differently, while "Bridge over Troubled Music" was given an additional electric piano solo over top of the introductory percussion.
Region | Date | Label | Format | Catalog |
---|---|---|---|---|
Japan | 25 November 1978 | Alfa Records | 12" LP; cassette | LP: ALR-6012; cassette: ALC-1511 |
USA | 30 May 1979 | A&M Records, Horizon Records & Tapes | 12" LP | SP-736, AMLH 68506 |
Japan | 25 July 1979 | Alfa Records | 12" LP; cassette (US version) | LP: ALR-6020; cassette: ALC-1533 |
Track listing
Original pressing
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Computer Game 'Theme from The Circus (コンピューター・ゲーム —サーカスのテーマ—)" | Yellow Magic Orchestra | 1:48 | |
2. | "Firecracker (ファイアークラッカー)" | Yellow Magic Orchestra, Martin Denny | 4:50 | |
3. | "Simoon (シムーン)" | Chris Mosdell | Haruomi Hosono | 6:27 |
4. | "Cosmic Surfin' (コズミック・サーフィン)" | Haruomi Hosono | 4:51 | |
5. | "Computer Game 'Theme from The Invader (コンピューター・ゲーム —インベーダーのテーマ—)" | Yellow Magic Orchestra | 0:43 |
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Tong Poo (東風, tonpū, "east wind")" | Ryuichi Sakamoto | 6:15 | |
2. | "La femme chinoise (中国女, Chūgoku-onna)" | Chris Mosdell | Yukihiro Takahashi | 5:52 |
3. | "Bridge over Troubled Music (ブリッジ・オーバー・トラブルド・ミュージック)" | Yellow Magic Orchestra | 1:17 | |
4. | "Mad Pierrot (マッド・ピエロ)" | Haruomi Hosono | 4:20 | |
5. | "Acrobat (アクロバット)" | Haruomi Hosono | 1:12 |
US pressing
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Computer Game 'Theme from The Circus" | Yellow Magic Orchestra | 1:48 | |
2. | "Firecracker" | Yellow Magic Orchestra, Martin Denny | 4:50 | |
3. | "Simoon" | Chris Mosdell | Haruomi Hosono | 6:27 |
4. | "Cosmic Surfin" | Haruomi Hosono | 4:51 | |
5. | "Computer Game 'Theme from The Invader" | Yellow Magic Orchestra | 0:46 |
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Yellow Magic (Tong Poo)" | Ryuichi Sakamoto | 6:17 | |
2. | "La femme chinoise" | Chris Mosdell | Yukihiro Takahashi | 5:55 |
3. | "Bridge over Troubled Music" | Yellow Magic Orchestra | 1:18 | |
4. | "Mad Pierrot" | Haruomi Hosono | 4:21 |
Personnel
- Ryuichi Sakamoto: keyboards, electronics, percussion, orchestration
- Yukihiro Takahashi: vocals, drums, percussion, electronics
- Haruomi Hosono: Bass, electronics, keyboards, arrangements
- Chris Mosdell: Lyrics
- Hideki Matsutake: Micro Composer programming
- Shunichi Hashimoto: Vocal on "Simoon"
- Masayoshi Takanaka: Electric guitar on "Cosmic Surfin" and "La femme chinoise"
- Tomoko Nunoi: Additional vocals on "La femme chinoise" (credited as "Sexy Voice")
- Minako Yoshida: Vocals on "Tong Poo" (US version)
Chart positions
Year | Release | Chart | Peak Position |
Weeks | Total sales |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | LP | Oricon LP Chart | 20 | 73 | 18700 |
1978 | Cassette | Oricon CT Chart | 17 | 35 | 6300 |
Chart (1980) | Peak position[3] |
---|---|
Billboard 200 | 81 |
R&B Albums | 37 |
Computer Game / Firecracker
The song "Firecracker" was released as a single twice in the United States, the first time in 1979 as "Firecracker", which became a major R&B hit in the United States.[1] The following year, it was released again in the United States as the "Computer Game" single, which combined the "Computer Game" and "Firecracker" tracks together. The "Computer Game" single was an ever greater international success, entering the top 20 of the UK Single Charts[4] and selling over 400,000 copies in the United States,[5] where it was particularly popular with the emerging hip hop community which appreciated the new electronic sounds and in the Bronx where it was later sampled by pioneering hip hop artist Afrika Bambaataa in his famous 1983 debut album Death Mix (1983).[6] The song was also sampled in a number of later songs, including 2 Live Crew's "Mega-Mixx II" (1988),[7] Warp's "Testone" (1990),[8] Jennifer Lopez's worldwide hit "I'm Real" (2001), and the original unreleased version of Mariah Carey's "Loverboy" (2001).[9]
Chart positions
Chart (1980) | Peak position[10] |
---|---|
UK Singles Chart[4] | 17 |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 60 |
U.S. Dance Club Singles | 42 |
U.S. R&B Singles | 18 |
References
- ^ a b c Lewis, John (4 July 2008). "Back to the future: Yellow Magic Orchestra helped usher in electronica - and they may just have invented hip-hop, too". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
- ^ "Artists and producers strive for inroads overseas", Billboard, vol. 91, no. 20, p. 61, 26 May 1979, ISSN 0006-2510, retrieved 2011-05-29
- ^ "Yellow Magic Orchestra: Billboard Albums". Allmusic. Retrieved 2011-05-25.
- ^ a b "Computer Game (Theme From 'the Invaders')". chartstats.com. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
- ^ "Computer rock music gaining fans". Sarasota Journal: 8. August 18, 1980. Retrieved 2011-05-25.
- ^ Buckley, Peter (2003). The rough guide to rock. Rough Guides. p. 901. ISBN 1843531054. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
- ^ "Yellow Magic Orchestra". whosampled.com. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
- ^ Dan Sicko & Bill Brewster (2010), Techno Rebels (2nd ed.), Wayne State University Press, p. 76, ISBN 0814334385, retrieved 2011-05-28
- ^ "Mariah 'Ripped Off' Twice on Same Record". Fox News. April 4, 2002. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
- ^ "Yellow Magic Orchestra: Billboard Singles". Allmusic. Retrieved 2011-05-25.