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| Type = [[Album]]
| Type = [[Album]]
| Artist = [[Japan (band)|Japan]]
| Artist = [[Japan (band)|Japan]]
| Cover = QuietLife.jpg
| Cover = Japanquietlife.jpg
| Background = orange
| Background = orange
| Released = December 1979
| Released = December 1979

Revision as of 11:07, 29 September 2006

Untitled

Released by Japan in 1979, this album was a huge departure for the band, musically. Their previous two albums had been more in the vein of glam rock, as opposed to their new New Wave leanings. They may have lost some fans, but they gained many more as this was their most popular album to date. As of today, the general consensus among fans is that this is Japan's best album, rivaled only by Tin Drum, which is more favoured by critics.

The album is also notable for being the first album where singer David Sylvian used his newfound more svelte, mature and subtle baritone vocal style, which later became one of the bands most distinctive hallmarks.

Track listing

  1. "Quiet Life" – 4:51
  2. "Fall in Love with Me" – 4:31
  3. "Despair" – 5:56
  4. "In Vogue" – 6:30
  5. "Halloween" – 4:24
  6. "All Tomorrow's Parties" – 5:43
  7. "Alien" – 5:01
  8. "The Other Side of Life" – 7:26
  • The 2004 remastered version adds
  1. "All Tomorrow's Parties (12" Version)" – 5:17
  2. "A Foreign Place" – 3:12
  3. "Quiet Life" – 4:50
  4. "Life in Tokyo (12" Version)" – 7:05

"A Foreign Place" was a b-side for the 12" Quiet Life single; the rest were remixes.

Singles

  1. "Quiet Life"
  2. "All Tomorrow's Parties"