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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ Media Fix ‹ Music

An Obituary for Shibuya-Kei

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An Obituary for Shibuya-Kei

Postby Captain Japan » Fri Oct 20, 2006 11:51 am

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Shibuya-kei leaves a warm afterglow
Japan Times
Although the artists once grouped under the Shibuya-kei umbrella -- Cornelius, Kahimi Karie and Fantastic Plastic Machine, to name a few -- have moved away from their old musical styles and want distance from the genre, Shibuya-kei remains a convenient expression to identify that loose assembly of 1990s musicians who rebelled against J-pop hegemony and transformed the international image of Japanese culture.

The Japanese media invented the term more than a decade ago to describe the hodge-podge of young musicians ignored by the mainstream, but who sold anomalously well at Shibuya's import record stores HMV and Tower Records. Sonically, the artists did not share a specific style, but more of a guiding philosophy. They worked almost exclusively in pastiche and bricolage -- mixing, matching, rearranging, deconstructing and straightup stealing from California '60s soft rock, French Ye-Ye, Chicago house, East Coast hip-hop sampling (Pizzicato Five), German Krautrock (Buffalo Daughter, Takako Minekawa), Scottish anorak pop, Madchester club beats (Flipper's Guitar), Brazilian bossa nova, Italian film soundtracks (Fantastic Plastic Machine) and any and all other internationalist, retro-futurist genres. Labels often referred to the result as "Japanese yogaku" -- Western music created by Japanese artists.

The music itself, however, has not aged particularly well -- especially since most of the output featured artists rewriting their favorite '60s songs with the minor addition of some then-contemporary but now-outdated production. With the key Shibuya-kei references better known and cataloged now, it is hard to imagine someone wanting to hear a quirky reinterpretation of songs by Roger Nichols & The Small Circle of Friends when the original tracks are easy to find....more...

This story mentions the popularity this stuff achieved overseas and the relative obscurity it holds in Japan. I always sort of linked the popularity to hipsters in the US simply liking something because it was Japanese. I can kind of see liking something for novelty's sake but Pizzicato 5 were pretty hopeless. Cornelius had his place but when he decided to release no less than two remix albums of stuff from his debut Fantasia (which was already a mish mash of things) I really thought he was pushing it. Cibo Matto were in NY when they were making music. Do they count? I saw them once. Again, I would say their popularity was mainly based in them being Japanese.

When people point out how lameness of foreigners in Japan achieving something simply because they are foreigners I think it goes both ways as well. And I think of Shibuya-kei music as an example. Certainly the artist Takashi Murakami and all the nonsense he's pushed all over Roppongi Hills would qualify. NYers got this guy started and I just don't get it.

This story mentions Zest in Shibuya as being one of the great places to pick up Shibuya-kei material. But I thought it was much, much more into foreign labels and foreign bands. I just noticed it closed a few weeks ago.
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Postby Red Floyd » Fri Oct 20, 2006 12:23 pm

I like Pizzicato 5, Happy End of the World and Playboy & Playgirl are solid albums.
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Postby Mulboyne » Fri Oct 20, 2006 12:30 pm

The writer of that article is Marxy and he regularly looks back on Shibuya kei as a Golden Age in his blog. He's certainly right that something interesting happened and it did draw interest overseas but he has a tendency to think that, before then, the world had no interest in Japanese popular culture (excluding anime and manga) and also that Japanese music had never referenced minor Western music trends and gained success. You can find regular instances of both before Flipper's Guitar appeared.
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Postby maraboutslim » Fri Oct 20, 2006 2:07 pm

Captain Japan wrote:When people point out how lameness of foreigners in Japan achieving something simply because they are foreigners I think it goes both ways as well.


Right on, Captain. I never got what was supposed to be so great about all that stuff either. I enjoyed the totally amateur pop bands playing in the live houses around tokyo much more than the shibuya-kei bands that some of my friends back in the states were so infatuated with.
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Postby Ol Dirty Gaijin » Fri Oct 20, 2006 10:46 pm

I thought they all made good Pop Music.
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Postby Ptyx » Sat Oct 21, 2006 1:18 am

Cornelius first album sounded really new at the time but it grew old pretty fast. I never understood why Pizzcato 5 got noticed in the west.
What's weird is that they had that huge musical culture and they still couldn't manage to do a great pop album.
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Postby Captain Japan » Sun Oct 22, 2006 8:53 am

Red Floyd wrote:I like Pizzicato 5, Happy End of the World and Playboy & Playgirl are solid albums.

I went to Amazon and listened to the clips for "Happy End of the World." I suppose I could see where people might like that. But I can't see something with all those random keyboard presets as being "solid."

The "Twiggy Twiggy" single is ok, I guess. But I just remember borrowing that album from a friend and immediately giving it back to him. Certainly, Takako Minekawa's voice is nice and I would guess that is a lot of their appeal.

Buffalo Daughter is mentioned in the article. I never would have thoughh of lumping them into this group. But what do I know?
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Postby Red Floyd » Sun Oct 22, 2006 10:39 am

Captain Japan wrote:I went to Amazon and listened to the clips for "Happy End of the World." I suppose I could see where people might like that. But I can't see something with all those random keyboard presets as being "solid."

The "Twiggy Twiggy" single is ok, I guess. But I just remember borrowing that album from a friend and immediately giving it back to him. Certainly, Takako Minekawa's voice is nice and I would guess that is a lot of their appeal.

Buffalo Daughter is mentioned in the article. I never would have thoughh of lumping them into this group. But what do I know?


I got Minekawa's album Cloudy Cloud Calculator souly for her cover of Telstar. It's actually an okay album to boot.
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