lisa wrote:no idea - just a photographer's model
dang.....here I thought you knew everything.
John Trevethan wrote:From her intimate knowledge and confidence I suspect that Lisa is Yuka!
lisa wrote:no,no,no... there are no real vocals on this track, they were all lifted from real ethnic recordings. it's a co-write between jansen and sylvian. yuka has NEVER contributed vocals to any japan recording except for spoken word. she said the line 'my tin drum' at the end of the track 'talking drum' from the album 'tin drum'. let's keep it real here.
karnsculpture wrote:lisa wrote:no,no,no... there are no real vocals on this track, they were all lifted from real ethnic recordings. it's a co-write between jansen and sylvian. yuka has NEVER contributed vocals to any japan recording except for spoken word. she said the line 'my tin drum' at the end of the track 'talking drum' from the album 'tin drum'. let's keep it real here.
One of the vocalists is Sandii, though not credited on the record; the male vocalist may be David or maybe Makoto Kubota. Compare it to some of her vocals on "Dhyana Pura" from "Heat Scale" and "Oinori" from "Eating Pleasure". The track has been included in a discography of her session work. To be fair, I did think for over 20 years that it was probably an archive recording.
About Yuka, I believe it's her voice on both Talking Drum and Still Life In Mobile Homes; but not on Nostalgia, as the voice comes from one of Holger Czuckay's tapes. If you see "The Secrets of Japan" you can see him manually "playing" the tape (which looks like a really strange format BTW) to make the sound wow and flutter. No way would he be able to make it sound the same twice. I think the doc shows him recording "Weathered Wall" but the same effect must have been applied on Nostalgia.
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