sheisnot wrote:Answer these questions: Where were you the first time you heard David Sylvian? Who, if anyone, turned you on to his work? What year was it, if you remember?
I *might* have first heard Japan on a local radio station in 1978 or 1979. For a very brief moment, the local commercial rock station went "all new wave" -- 24/7 of seriously underground, anti-corporate noise. It was a ratings disaster, of course, so they quickly switched to a more commercially acceptable format. But while it lasted it was wonderful. I was only ten or eleven years old, and it was my first taste of bands like Wire, the Urban Verbs, Jonathan Richman, X, Public Image and Gary Numan. And I'm pretty sure that they played tracks from "Adolescent Sex" and "Obscure Alternatives" as well.
The first time I *clearly* remember hearing Japan was about a year later on another radio show called "Radios In Motion", which I think was broadcast on Sunday nights from 11PM until 2AM on a nearby public radio station. The track was "Quiet Life", and I remember liking it but I don't think it struck me as anything special at the time.
It wasn't until I started tuning in to the Electrifying Mojo's "Midnight Funk Association" on WGPR, a Detroit R&B station, that I really started paying attention to Japan. At the time, American R&B and hip-hop was heavily influenced by European electronic music, so his playlist included Afrika Bambaataa's "Planet Rock" and Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing" album alongside John Foxx's "Metamatic" and Kraftwerk; Japan's "Life In Tokyo" and "Eurpoean Son" got a lot of spins. "Gentleman Take Polaroids" got some play as well. But when "Tin Drum" came out, Mojo flipped and pretty much played the entire album from start to finish. It was so bold and unique and refreshing that it couldn't help but grab my attention, and that's when I knew that Japan was a band that I needed to add to my collection.
The only Japan album that was widely available in America at that time was "Japan", which was five tracks from "Tin Drum" and three tracks from "GTP", so that was my first purchase. But within a couple of years I had the bands' entire collection and "Brilliant Trees" had just been released.
More than twenty years later... still a fan!