I cannot believe this is 42 years old and they still sound so damn good. Yes it is live and no hidden vocals etc. Superb! As for Mick Karn .... No words ...
Can you imagine the latest pop rabble trying to play live on the Old Grey Whistle Test? It really was a test of your musician capabilities and this band had talent to the core!
@@larsfillmore4765 OGWT was such a great show. Around the same time (1981-ish) King Crimson came out of hiding and played the OGWT and re-announced themselves to the world with a new line-up of old and new members Fripp-Bruford & Belew-Levin. Mind blowing. So many great performances on that live show. With the Japan performances among them, of course. OGWT was one of the highlights of the week for sure. They really should bring it back (but I guess it would hurt sales and streaming revenue if the top popsters of the day refused or didn't appear on the show or did a bad job of it) Yep, everything is backing tracks and autotuned to death these days (not all bands, but many of the popsters are reliant on those devices now. Makes you wonder how bad the pop stars of today would sound without the auto-tune, vocal fx and pitch correction etc)
Original Japan fan here, from their Arista days. Saw them live and my god, they were seasoned musicians. Shame how Rob Dean was treated but there we are. I still love their music
Yes it was Sylvian’s decision and he ghosted him after. What a miserable sod he became. He was always smiling early on. The rest of the band stayed in touch with Rob, who now lives in Costa Rica.
@@TimJackson-eq6iy Worked with Sinead O' Connor in the 90's. He emigrated to Costa Rica. He was a keen bird watcher and it's good for that kind of activity over there.
This is where TH-cam excels. Uncovering this video was such a joy. I was a big fan back in the day and saw them live a couple of times. Their music hasn't dated at all and still sounds great now. I still have some of their albums and listen occasionally. Mick Karn was one of the best bass players ever. Wonderful.
Jansen has one of the most inhumanly perfect senses of time, of any drummer alive: and this video goes a long way to showing how he got it. There simply was no place to hide: the music was purposefully sparse - and he had to play super-precisely to a severely hard timed, TR-808 on a backing tape track: not only did he have to stay exactly in time, or else the whole band would suffer a very public train wreck, but in order for his drum's accents to be heard, he had to learn to hit his drums just slightly ahead of the 808 but without speeding up - and fall ever so slightly behind the beat in places where he wanted to lay back, without ever slowing down: and do this to perfection throughout an entire tour, night after night - and eventually, and probably inadvertently, he became the master of the super precise pocket.
I drummed to a click live like that for a period of a few months and I REALLY learned about how my brain does not really know about time. Anyone who thinks playing to a click is cheating has not tried it for real. Every now and then you get a brainfart and could swear it's the click that moved.
Steve Carter Hey Steve, it might be the Haas effect - screws up a lot of people, the click completely disappears to the human ear if you're just a touch ahead, but within a dozen or so milliseconds ( on fast attack sounds - longer on slower attack sounds ). I remember when I started exploring time by tapping with a pencil to a metronome - it'd freak me out whenever my pencil or the metronome suddenly disappeared ( depending on which was just a smidgen behind the other ) - but that just means you're doing it right. If anybody's curious, I strongly recommend checking it out for yourself, just get a pencil, and try tapping along to a metronome … sooner or later: it'll happen.
Anyone coming here for the first time please understand, there had been nothing before and there's been nothing, NOTHING since, to compare with the uniqueness of Japan. Do your research and you'll discover for yourself. Mick Karns bass-lines are unique in pop/rock and deserve to be recognised as genius - on the album "Tin Drum" but especially on their seminal work "Gentlemen Take Polaroids". They are, in my opinion, the best band that ever was....
+ASM Rob couldn't agree more mate , but loved early albums , obscure alternatives , and adolescent sex . listening to them again , bring back happy memeries R.I.P mick karn
I've only just seen this comment and you're bang on the money. I've never heard anything like this in my life and I don't think I will, it's exceptional. Mick Karn's musical genius alone is phenomenal, he played soo many intstruments...
ASM Rob They were a good band, particularly in their "mature" and final incarnation "Tin Drum" era. However, they did obviously derive much inspiration from Roxy Music (particularly in regards to Sylvian's vocal style) and Berlin era Bowie and so weren't entirely without precedent. I agree that Mick Karn was a fantastic bass player however, and I'm a big fan of most of Sylvian's solo output.
at a time when bands like Spandau Ballet and Duran Duran were headlining the "New Romantic" charge, Japan were monstrously under-rated. Still one of my favorite bands of all time. R.I.P Mick...
They weren't underrated at all. The absurdly abstract and minimalist Ghosts reached the Top 5 in the UK ffs. The only thing that stopped them exposing the bands you mentioned for being lightweight and second rate in comparison to Japan was the fact Japan split. Simple as. John Taylor of Duran wrote a very touching tribute to Mick when he died.
***** I was listening to Ghosts recently and remembered that it made the top 5 in the UK. Now it would be astonishing that a song like that would chart at all, let alone make the top 5.
@@briancox8518 Yup, Japan blew away everyone for their creativity, depth and technical ability in that period. The fact they split up at the age of 23-24 still makes my mind melt - I was making cups of tea for pop video directors at that age, not kissing goodbye to a body of work that stands proud 40 years later. Sheesh.
Mick Karn inspired me to pick up bass, sadly I sold it to cocaine addiction. Came back to this live performance, now sober. Going to pick up the bass again.
He sure was a genius...they all were sorry different,there music was one of a kind,of an era that has gone by..the best era ever I think most people think of that while listening to this
The bass lines both hypnotic and savage, like it speaks to the most basic of emotions and the most complex. Just incredible how creative all of this band was.
I vividly remember coming home after school one day to find my dad desperately hunting through all of his CDs looking for 'Gentlemen Take Polaroids'. He turned to me, I pulled out my CD player from my school bag and showed him the CD. He could not stop smiling. It is one of those father / son moments I will take to the grave. I wish my generation (I am 30 years old - born in '88) appreciated more music from this era ... sadly almost anything can pass as 'music' now. On a side note, recently I have been listening to a lot of 'Talk Talk' and there are moments when I can hear some similarities to 'Japan'. I can't put my finger on what it is exactly, but there is something. I would be interested to know if anyone else has felt the same. Happy listening all.
Mm I’m not in your generation- I’m 17, and I know some kids my age into this type of music; though that may just be because of the people I choose to associate with.
56 !! I can't believe it! Love this song!! Use to listen to this track when starting a new course or new job.... sitting on the train with my head phones on !!!
I grew up listening to Japan because of my dad. 2 years ago I started listening to them properly and David Sylvian as a solo artist. Best thing I’ve done I’m obsessed. Thank you Dad
Don't forget to look up " The Dolphin Brothers " album which was a collaborative effort with Steve Jansen on Drums & Vocals & Richard Barbieri & there's a few numbers he sounds like his brother David Sylvian/incase didn't know they both (as in Steve & David) changed their family surname names that better suited them & sounded better than their birth names, it happens all the time in movie & music industry... Then you owe it to yourself to look out Mick Karn's solo work, as thst man is truly up there with the Bass Gods & how he managed to play those bass lines is still amazing to here to this day whether it's with Japan or his Solo work or collaborative work with Joan Armatrading/More Ure/Kate Bush & many many more... There were only 2 Fearless Bass Player's from the UK that brought the Electric Fretless Bass Guitar forward within a band environment back in the mid 70s & 80s onwards & that was Mick Karn RIP & Pino Palladino... Pino along with Paul Youngs vocals & those amazing fretless bass lines on a MusicMan Stingray Fretless Bass Guutar have entered into the music hall of fame for Pino's ability to Add to a vocalists song... Listen to Paul Young first break through album " No Parlez " with Pino playing on most of those songs & Paul Young has admitted time & time again it was working & collaborating with Pino Palladino & him adding those bass lines which added that special extra ingredient that would then appow Paul Young's career to start as it would never have taken off as Pino was the final piece of the puzzle to build a band around Paul Young with the best of British session/sideman players... As far as David Sylvian going solo there are many who favour certain solo albums & mine are " Gone To Earth " with the tracks # Waves # & # Silver Moon # being just 2 of my go to on that album favourites... My 2nd various solo album would be " Secrets Of The Beehive " & again I love all his work with Japan & his solo albums but those 2 albums just hit me right in the heart... I'd also recommend Sting from his work with " The Police " But again like many singers within a band environment that go on to leave you think WTF!.. But Sting went on to being on of the UKs most celebrated solo artists with sings like " Fragile " & " The Shape Of My Heart & many more & if you thought he was great on bass guitar listen to him playing acoustic & Rythmn & lead guitar along with other instruments... Your Dad surely had good taste but there are many more amazing solo artists or bands that I could name, but I'll leave you with those albums & songs to look into... Enjoy what's left of the Easter Weekend & Holiday Monday but like many you'll most likely be working... All The Best... " Alba Gu Brath " .....
Still find it hard to listen to this and not feel strange. I was 13 years old when I first heard the sound of Gentleman Take Polaroids drifting from sister's bedroom across the hall. I was never the same again. An epiphany in every sense.
OGWT didn't allow lip syncing, I remember watching this live at the time and amazed. Any Japan fan ached to see them on TV which was relatively rare, bar a few crap totp events, they did a couple more appearances on here and both were great also. Saw them live @ leicester, simply superb, a shame they never got back in true form... a loss to music, RIP mick, simply great
And somebody should add a note that Steve Jansen's playing is instantly recognizable and rather than a blare of a million beats, it's ALWAYS the perfect beat in the perfect place with the perfect empty space between to drive the whole thing along. One of the best drummers ever! With Karn, rest him, and Barbieri it was an incredible rhythm section.
Think about it...of all bands of their time and generation, no one has even attempted to imitate them...not even Sylvian or Rain Tree Crow...this sound is pristine and unparalleled...still. All fans of this...you are family. Cheers.
And Sylvian threw it all away so casually in order to eventually make some of the most supercilious condescending crap ever. With titles which deserve nothing less than a slap. 'Plight and Premonition' while 'loud weather' was 'buffeting' 'Naoshima'?? He's such an idiot.
blackmore4 Well once David Sylvian stole Mick Karn’s girlfriend it was all downhill all the way from there. With the exception of his work with Riuchi Sakamoto
@@blackmore4 lol. He has tons of great solo work. His ambient work might be a particular taste that everyone doesn't like but i have no problem listening to it. But his 3 first solo albums i personally think are just as brilliant as many of the Japan albums. Especially Gone to Earth.
@@DonHaka Different strokes... except for 'Pulling Punches', I thought the first album was brilliant but found 'Gone too Earth' way too digital and prog for my tastes. I loved the third album ('Secrets of the Beehive') but, after that, as far as I'm concerned, he became unbearable.
@@briancox8518 I feel he was eased out of the band and then they later bring in this Japanese guy, seems it was intended, maybe his face didn’t fit, shame !
This is one of the rarest of bands... a band that disintegrated at their absolute artistic and creative peak. Not even the Beatles can lay claim to that.
@@Captain_Rhodes I guess it depends... I consider The Beatles' artistic peak to be Revolver thru White Album. Abbey Road is a classic, but I don't think it lives up to the previous three, and Let It Be was a lesser album still. Japan, on the other hand, were indisputably on an upwards trajectory artistically when they split. Just my opinion, of course.
@@TimmyTantrum i know abbey road isnt experimental but IMO its as good as the others because the songs are great. let it be was a film soundtrack that wasnt properly released until after they split so its not their last record. I love Japan and the beatles though. im not one of those argumentative little shits you get on here lol. Also dont forget the last thing japan did was rain tree crow. I like that album quite a bit, but it wasnt as good as tin drum. But then we go down the hole of comeback albums and all that ;-)
Are you kidding me? The Beatles can't hold a candle, compared to Japan. Everybody say it with me now, "The Beatles are just 'iconic,' not talented." Anyone who listens to the Beatles are either just following the crowd, or never heard actual good music. Trust me, as they get wind of actual, good music, they'll drop the Beatles quicker than you can say Yellow Submarine. 😒
Saw them in 1981... Blew my mind, no one like them before or since. still listen too them often and the production is still sounding great and unique Play Loud my friends
this is NEARLY 40 YEARS AGO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! genius then and now ...... Long live Japan ! thanks for the music guys , made my school days liveable
Sometimes I get overwhelmed by all the great, respectful comments from so many loyal and passionate fans of my favorite band. I love knowing you are out there. Thanks...
Japan were brilliant live. I had the pleasure to watch them perform and they were all outstanding. I still love this band now as much as I did 34year ago. BRILLIANT
My New Career - it just lilts and sways like a dance... it's out of this world and nothing, absolutely nothing touches it... it's way ahead of time even today, I find it mesmerising this was part of the 1980s and yet they're rarely honoured today.
I saw the video for Swing on Much Music in the early 90’s and really liked it. I assumed it came out around 1987. I couldn’t believe it when it said 1980. I was so shocked I believed it was a typo.
Absolutely priceless footage! Mick Karn is a legend amongst us Bass players, he had such a distinctive style and played so effortlessly he made playing the Bass look easy....Such an influential group...Simply sublime!
great video, I can appreciate the play of Richard Barbieri on P5, Oberheim Obx, Moog microMoog, and Roland 100 Modular . first [ of the full discography] album of Japan that I bought in 1980, for me a pleasant obsession with Sakamoto, Karrn, Masami Tsuchyia, Bill Nelson and others too many to mention.
just every now and then a band like japan comes along, beyond compare in every respect. I lived with their music in the 80s. I still listen to it today. RIP Mick Karn.
That comment about the 13 year-old-girls kinda pissed me off. I was 12/13 when I discovered Japan. Sure, I was enamored by their image initially but I realized quickly just how unique their sound was and rather sophisticated to my young ears. Here I am 30 years later and I (like others) grew up with them and sustained my affection during their long careers. Sometimes 13 year-old's should be trusted to know what they like. Humph.
What a bassline on My New Career. This takes me back - I was blown away, intrigued and thrilled by this band, it was nothing we had heard before. RIP Mick.
Listening to the sounds of the of the music and especially David's voice it's really apparent of how big of an influence that this band and other bands of this genre and similar genres influenced japanese music in the 80s in 90s. I could probably listen David's voice all day, its feels like velvet.
saw these guys in Liverpool 1980 , they were amazing totally professional , one of the best "real" bands of the 80's also saw ultravox same venue , saw lots of bands around that time, but these two were the best ....brings back nice memories
Wow! The opening guitar and bass salvo from Rob and Mick is awesome! The intro to Swing, this version or the longer LP version, is one of my favourite song intros. Thanks for the HQ upload!
Such a wonderful video... David waiting with his hands in the pockets and Mick on the frontline playing his amazing bass line are the representation of pure style...
Why have I only seen this today 😮. Such an interesting and underrated band and still sounding fresh while transporting those of us who lived the 80s back to those best days.
Great to see this .I never get tired of listening to Japan,Went to see them on tin drum tour at D M Hall in Coventry , got the program signed back stage , Then crashed car in heavy snow on way home,oh happy days ,R I P Mik .
This is the best thing i have seen for ages,japan were so far ahead of there time,absolutely brilliant.haunting,so tight wow,everything is exceptional.anyone wanting to know anything about music should see this,.fantastic,thankyou so much.....Music nowadays is a sham,and there was this ,thank god i was an eighties child.
I am a definite Mick Karn fan, but Richard and Rob provide sterling performances on synth and guitar respectively. Rob's solos on both tracks are to die for.
Thanks for posting this wonderful Japan performance from The Old Grey Whistle Test. It is certainly one of their best. Sad to hear Mick Karn passed away last year but the Music and memories of those days live on. :)
My Girlfriend at the time and her brother introduced me to Japan in 1990. Never looked back since! Mick Karn was legendary. David clearly the icing on the cake........The music is and will always be on point and out there, sexy, raw, super kool and the Look was just amazing!
My favourite Japan song. Scott Walker would have loved it, and Mick Karn was a magnificent bass player. Japan were the true inheritors of early Roxy Music, before they became Mr Ferry's backing band.
This original band lineup was just too talented to stay together for a long time. Just way too much talent. Huge influence to so many subsequent groups. RIP Mick Karn. I never could predict what you were going to do on the bass next.
Im 18 this year (probably one of the younger people in this comment section) and ive grown up with this music and always just saw it as "dad music" but the older i get the more i appreciate it and go back to it.
Mick Karn has to be regarded as one of the best (and distinctive) bass players of all time.
and sooo very stylish too !
Eggy Noggy - Have u heard Percy Jones?
It hurts they were that good.
Gordon Speller still giving me chills every tine i hear them
Jaco Pastorius level if not better in some respects.
I cannot believe this is 42 years old and they still sound so damn good. Yes it is live and no hidden vocals etc. Superb! As for Mick Karn .... No words ...
Im with ya. He's better than Bowie. Whisper it quietly
I love Japan, but remember … they’re superb Bowie and Ferry clones!
Can you imagine the latest pop rabble trying to play live on the Old Grey Whistle Test? It really was a test of your musician capabilities and this band had talent to the core!
@@larsfillmore4765 OGWT was such a great show. Around the same time (1981-ish) King Crimson came out of hiding and played the OGWT and re-announced themselves to the world with a new line-up of old and new members Fripp-Bruford & Belew-Levin. Mind blowing. So many great performances on that live show. With the Japan performances among them, of course. OGWT was one of the highlights of the week for sure. They really should bring it back (but I guess it would hurt sales and streaming revenue if the top popsters of the day refused or didn't appear on the show or did a bad job of it)
Yep, everything is backing tracks and autotuned to death these days (not all bands, but many of the popsters are reliant on those devices now. Makes you wonder how bad the pop stars of today would sound without the auto-tune, vocal fx and pitch correction etc)
Careful, a lot of OGRT was mimed to a backing track... Notice she said 'live TV appearance'... not 'playing live'.
Original Japan fan here, from their Arista days. Saw them live and my god, they were seasoned musicians. Shame how Rob Dean was treated but there we are.
I still love their music
Sylvian's doing I believe.
Yes it was Sylvian’s decision and he ghosted him after. What a miserable sod he became. He was always smiling early on. The rest of the band stayed in touch with Rob, who now lives in Costa Rica.
What did happen to Rob? I have all the others work after Japan, but Rob just disappeared.
@@TimJackson-eq6iy Worked with Sinead O' Connor in the 90's. He emigrated to Costa Rica. He was a keen bird watcher and it's good for that kind of activity over there.
Exotic bird watching.
This is where TH-cam excels. Uncovering this video was such a joy. I was a big fan back in the day and saw them live a couple of times. Their music hasn't dated at all and still sounds great now. I still have some of their albums and listen occasionally. Mick Karn was one of the best bass players ever. Wonderful.
Saw em Birmingham odeon '82..mick karn moonwalking across the stage..great days.
Jansen has one of the most inhumanly perfect senses of time, of any drummer alive: and this video goes a long way to showing how he got it. There simply was no place to hide: the music was purposefully sparse - and he had to play super-precisely to a severely hard timed, TR-808 on a backing tape track: not only did he have to stay exactly in time, or else the whole band would suffer a very public train wreck, but in order for his drum's accents to be heard, he had to learn to hit his drums just slightly ahead of the 808 but without speeding up - and fall ever so slightly behind the beat in places where he wanted to lay back, without ever slowing down: and do this to perfection throughout an entire tour, night after night - and eventually, and probably inadvertently, he became the master of the super precise pocket.
I drummed to a click live like that for a period of a few months and I REALLY learned about how my brain does not really know about time. Anyone who thinks playing to a click is cheating has not tried it for real. Every now and then you get a brainfart and could swear it's the click that moved.
CusterFlux Agree his precision is a force of nature although I think you will wind it is a CR-68 or similar drum unit, 808's weren't around yet..
Steve Carter
Hey Steve, it might be the Haas effect - screws up a lot of people, the click completely disappears to the human ear if you're just a touch ahead, but within a dozen or so milliseconds ( on fast attack sounds - longer on slower attack sounds ). I remember when I started exploring time by tapping with a pencil to a metronome - it'd freak me out whenever my pencil or the metronome suddenly disappeared ( depending on which was just a smidgen behind the other ) - but that just means you're doing it right. If anybody's curious, I strongly recommend checking it out for yourself, just get a pencil, and try tapping along to a metronome … sooner or later: it'll happen.
CusterFlux fascinating! Will be searching for that effect now. Thanks
CusterFlux n
Still one of the best bands ever . Yep 2024
Potentially my fav band growing up and still in my top 3 and I'm now 56!!!!
Anyone coming here for the first time please understand, there had been nothing before and there's been nothing, NOTHING since, to compare with the uniqueness of Japan. Do your research and you'll discover for yourself. Mick Karns bass-lines are unique in pop/rock and deserve to be recognised as genius - on the album "Tin Drum" but especially on their seminal work "Gentlemen Take Polaroids". They are, in my opinion, the best band that ever was....
I also think there the best band that ever were to, this is the real deal, the days when music was intelligent - Japan.
+ASM Rob couldn't agree more mate , but loved early albums , obscure alternatives , and adolescent sex . listening to them again , bring back happy memeries R.I.P mick karn
I'm a year late, but I agree with the guy who was a year late agreeing with the first guy :-)
I've only just seen this comment and you're bang on the money. I've never heard anything like this in my life and I don't think I will, it's exceptional. Mick Karn's musical genius alone is phenomenal, he played soo many intstruments...
ASM Rob They were a good band, particularly in their "mature" and final incarnation "Tin Drum" era. However, they did obviously derive much inspiration from Roxy Music (particularly in regards to Sylvian's vocal style) and Berlin era Bowie and so weren't entirely without precedent. I agree that Mick Karn was a fantastic bass player however, and I'm a big fan of most of Sylvian's solo output.
at a time when bands like Spandau Ballet and Duran Duran were headlining the "New Romantic" charge, Japan were monstrously under-rated. Still one of my favorite bands of all time. R.I.P Mick...
They weren't underrated at all. The absurdly abstract and minimalist Ghosts reached the Top 5 in the UK ffs. The only thing that stopped them exposing the bands you mentioned for being lightweight and second rate in comparison to Japan was the fact Japan split. Simple as. John Taylor of Duran wrote a very touching tribute to Mick when he died.
***** I was listening to Ghosts recently and remembered that it made the top 5 in the UK. Now it would be astonishing that a song like that would chart at all, let alone make the top 5.
T@@CONSIDERABLYMORE1 they were never gonna meet the queen for tea with boy george,,integrity
Japan were never part of the new romantic scene
@@briancox8518 Yup, Japan blew away everyone for their creativity, depth and technical ability in that period. The fact they split up at the age of 23-24 still makes my mind melt - I was making cups of tea for pop video directors at that age, not kissing goodbye to a body of work that stands proud 40 years later. Sheesh.
Mick Karn was the spirit of Japan. What a genius, what a bassist !
Mick Karn inspired me to pick up bass, sadly I sold it to cocaine addiction. Came back to this live performance, now sober. Going to pick up the bass again.
@@alfiewhitnell1387 How's it going?
RIP Mick Karn.
He sure was a genius...they all were sorry different,there music was one of a kind,of an era that has gone by..the best era ever
I think most people think of that while listening to this
Mick certainly had the most energy.
The bass lines both hypnotic and savage, like it speaks to the most basic of emotions and the most complex. Just incredible how creative all of this band was.
I vividly remember coming home after school one day to find my dad desperately hunting through all of his CDs looking for 'Gentlemen Take Polaroids'. He turned to me, I pulled out my CD player from my school bag and showed him the CD. He could not stop smiling. It is one of those father / son moments I will take to the grave.
I wish my generation (I am 30 years old - born in '88) appreciated more music from this era ... sadly almost anything can pass as 'music' now.
On a side note, recently I have been listening to a lot of 'Talk Talk' and there are moments when I can hear some similarities to 'Japan'. I can't put my finger on what it is exactly, but there is something. I would be interested to know if anyone else has felt the same.
Happy listening all.
The first time I saw Gentlemen Take Polaroids on rave (AU) in year 12 it changed my life..
Mm I’m not in your generation- I’m 17, and I know some kids my age into this type of music; though that may just be because of the people I choose to associate with.
That little moment was so cute! Made me smile. This is a great band!
@@witchflowers6942 oh god, i'm very happy to know i'm not the only teenager to like japan
Only 8 years older than you and very much feel a similarity between Japan and Talk Talk. I absolutely love the last two albums from Talk Talk.
Sigh......55 years old and still listening.
50 here
55 and still loving, never feeling old so long as you love music, Jay and boxer malarkey 🐶❤❤❤
Anch'io!!!!
56 !! I can't believe it! Love this song!! Use to listen to this track when starting a new course or new job.... sitting on the train with my head phones on !!!
Me too mate, me too 👍🏼
I grew up listening to Japan because of my dad. 2 years ago I started listening to them properly and David Sylvian as a solo artist. Best thing I’ve done I’m obsessed. Thank you Dad
Your dad has good taste
Loved Japanese
Great stuff.
Don't forget to look up " The Dolphin Brothers " album which was a collaborative effort with Steve Jansen on Drums & Vocals & Richard Barbieri & there's a few numbers he sounds like his brother David Sylvian/incase didn't know they both (as in Steve & David) changed their family surname names that better suited them & sounded better than their birth names, it happens all the time in movie & music industry...
Then you owe it to yourself to look out Mick Karn's solo work, as thst man is truly up there with the Bass Gods & how he managed to play those bass lines is still amazing to here to this day whether it's with Japan or his Solo work or collaborative work with Joan Armatrading/More Ure/Kate Bush & many many more...
There were only 2 Fearless Bass Player's from the UK that brought the Electric Fretless Bass Guitar forward within a band environment back in the mid 70s & 80s onwards & that was Mick Karn RIP & Pino Palladino...
Pino along with Paul Youngs vocals & those amazing fretless bass lines on a MusicMan Stingray Fretless Bass Guutar have entered into the music hall of fame for Pino's ability to Add to a vocalists song...
Listen to Paul Young first break through album " No Parlez " with Pino playing on most of those songs & Paul Young has admitted time & time again it was working & collaborating with Pino Palladino & him adding those bass lines which added that special extra ingredient that would then appow Paul Young's career to start as it would never have taken off as Pino was the final piece of the puzzle to build a band around Paul Young with the best of British session/sideman players...
As far as David Sylvian going solo there are many who favour certain solo albums & mine are " Gone To Earth " with the tracks # Waves # & # Silver Moon # being just 2 of my go to on that album favourites...
My 2nd various solo album would be " Secrets Of The Beehive " & again I love all his work with Japan & his solo albums but those 2 albums just hit me right in the heart...
I'd also recommend Sting from his work with
" The Police " But again like many singers within a band environment that go on to leave you think WTF!..
But Sting went on to being on of the UKs most celebrated solo artists with sings like " Fragile " & " The Shape Of My Heart & many more & if you thought he was great on bass guitar listen to him playing acoustic & Rythmn & lead guitar along with other instruments...
Your Dad surely had good taste but there are many more amazing solo artists or bands that I could name, but I'll leave you with those albums & songs to look into...
Enjoy what's left of the Easter Weekend & Holiday Monday but like many you'll most likely be working...
All The Best...
" Alba Gu Brath "
.....
Big props to your dad! I have done the same for my 3 girls. Japan is essential!
Still find it hard to listen to this and not feel strange. I was 13 years old when I first heard the sound of Gentleman Take Polaroids drifting from sister's bedroom across the hall. I was never the same again. An epiphany in every sense.
Beautiful
Verdade
oh man, Mick is the boss. Beautiful playing. What a band these guys were. RIP Mr Karn, you are sorely missed.
Chris A. Totally agree with you! Great band They were with stunning bass by Mick
My fury at Sylvian's casual dismissal of something so brilliantly unique has never diminished.
Did he? Wow.
Since when did he do that?
@@jake-fj2zi He's always said that he doesn't like most of Japan's output.
@@jake-fj2zi when he took Mick Karn's girlfriend off him.
@@andyfin990 😹
OGWT didn't allow lip syncing, I remember watching this live at the time and amazed. Any Japan fan ached to see them on TV which was relatively rare, bar a few crap totp events, they did a couple more appearances on here and both were great also. Saw them live @ leicester, simply superb, a shame they never got back in true form... a loss to music, RIP mick, simply great
Also the gentlemen in this band had a sharp sense of style! Those suits & ties.🔥🔥🔥
Rock city
And somebody should add a note that Steve Jansen's playing is instantly recognizable and rather than a blare of a million beats, it's ALWAYS the perfect beat in the perfect place with the perfect empty space between to drive the whole thing along. One of the best drummers ever! With Karn, rest him, and Barbieri it was an incredible rhythm section.
Absolutely fantastic rhythm section. Came for Sylvian's velvety vocals, stayed for those velvety fluid beats.
I cannot express how special this band is.
Mick Karn's talent is nothing short of breathtaking.
Thank you for posting.
lol based West Ham
Such an underrated band. Real thinkers, and their music was amazing.
Think about it...of all bands of their time and generation, no one has even attempted to imitate them...not even Sylvian or Rain Tree Crow...this sound is pristine and unparalleled...still. All fans of this...you are family. Cheers.
36 years ago but it still looks and sounds like the future.
And Sylvian threw it all away so casually in order to eventually make some of the most supercilious condescending crap ever. With titles which deserve nothing less than a slap. 'Plight and Premonition' while 'loud weather' was 'buffeting' 'Naoshima'?? He's such an idiot.
blackmore4 Well once David Sylvian stole Mick Karn’s girlfriend it was all downhill all the way from there. With the exception of his work with Riuchi Sakamoto
36 years ago....where has that gone....
@@blackmore4 lol. He has tons of great solo work. His ambient work might be a particular taste that everyone doesn't like but i have no problem listening to it. But his 3 first solo albums i personally think are just as brilliant as many of the Japan albums. Especially Gone to Earth.
@@DonHaka
Different strokes... except for 'Pulling Punches', I thought the first album was brilliant but found 'Gone too Earth' way too digital and prog for my tastes. I loved the third album ('Secrets of the Beehive') but, after that, as far as I'm concerned, he became unbearable.
Mick gets so much praise and for reason but lets not forget Rob Dean, without Rob this group would never have existed.
Yes Rob Dean is often forgotten
Rob is now one of the most respected bird illustrators in the world.
@@briancox8518 I feel he was eased out of the band and then they later bring in this Japanese guy, seems it was intended, maybe his face didn’t fit, shame !
Exactly and a very friendly active person on Facebook and active musician
Japan lost something special when Rob left so for me GTP is there masterpiece
most underated band ever.never got the credit they deserved.nightporter.masterpiece.
This is one of the rarest of bands... a band that disintegrated at their absolute artistic and creative peak. Not even the Beatles can lay claim to that.
_"...a band that disintegrated at their absolute artistic and creative peak"_
Yep. Terribly true.
well tbf the beatles last album was pretty damn great and a legitimate choice for their best ;-)
@@Captain_Rhodes I guess it depends... I consider The Beatles' artistic peak to be Revolver thru White Album. Abbey Road is a classic, but I don't think it lives up to the previous three, and Let It Be was a lesser album still. Japan, on the other hand, were indisputably on an upwards trajectory artistically when they split. Just my opinion, of course.
@@TimmyTantrum i know abbey road isnt experimental but IMO its as good as the others because the songs are great. let it be was a film soundtrack that wasnt properly released until after they split so its not their last record. I love Japan and the beatles though. im not one of those argumentative little shits you get on here lol. Also dont forget the last thing japan did was rain tree crow. I like that album quite a bit, but it wasnt as good as tin drum. But then we go down the hole of comeback albums and all that ;-)
Are you kidding me? The Beatles can't hold a candle, compared to Japan. Everybody say it with me now, "The Beatles are just 'iconic,' not talented." Anyone who listens to the Beatles are either just following the crowd, or never heard actual good music. Trust me, as they get wind of actual, good music, they'll drop the Beatles quicker than you can say Yellow Submarine. 😒
Mick Karn is an eternal master of bass...for sure in the top ten bassist ever, along the Jaco and the other guys...RIP...
I get sick to the teeth of Americans bigging up Geddy Lee , most of them never heard of Mick Karn , Jean jacque burnel or Norman Watt Roy .
@@patbassman8251 Ironic it bothers you that Americans bring up Geddy since he's Canadian. Absolutely a top 10 bassist though.
One of the best bands ever to explore the incredible possibilities of art, visual style and serious music
Saw them in 1981... Blew my mind, no one like them before or since. still listen too them often and the production is still sounding great and unique Play Loud my friends
pretty boys in makeup? what an introduction! they were so much more than that!! they were actually talented and produced some good music
Yeah so condescending and plain wrong. A rare dud from Ms Nightingale.
this is NEARLY 40 YEARS AGO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! genius then and now ...... Long live Japan ! thanks for the music guys , made my school days liveable
Sometimes I get overwhelmed by all the great, respectful comments from so many loyal and passionate fans of my favorite band. I love knowing you are out there. Thanks...
Yes we are here!❤ burning brightly🔥🔥🔥
You know you're not _in_ the band right.
It's a fantastic performance. At that time these songs, My New Career in particular, sounded so original, so exotic, so other-worldly...
I have to say these tracks still sound very original and unique. A lot more younger people should give these guys a try
My favourite band of all time and who were an influence on so many...truly unique and light years ahead...R.I.P. Mick, you were a true genius.
MY GOD....What a stunning super beautiful lovely music....Japan makes me cry everytime
I was lucky enough to see them live at Birmingham Odeon, they really were brilliant live.
Japan were brilliant live. I had the pleasure to watch them perform and they were all outstanding. I still love this band now as much as I did 34year ago. BRILLIANT
One of my most favourite bands of the 80's.
Still love them today.
Really enjoying Rob’s guitar in this particular performance. All the other elements, mick, steve, Rich as on point as ever.
My New Career - it just lilts and sways like a dance... it's out of this world and nothing, absolutely nothing touches it... it's way ahead of time even today, I find it mesmerising this was part of the 1980s and yet they're rarely honoured today.
I saw the video for Swing on Much Music in the early 90’s and really liked it. I assumed it came out around 1987. I couldn’t believe it when it said 1980. I was so shocked I believed it was a typo.
Yep, may I coin the phrase 'Modernist music'? 'Cause it was.
I love the mick makes the bass sing backing vocals. ...He really made the bass sing
Absolutely priceless footage! Mick Karn is a legend amongst us Bass players, he had such a distinctive style and played so effortlessly he made playing the Bass look easy....Such an influential group...Simply sublime!
Pure unadulterated art, a communion of talent.
Anyone mentioning Duran Duran or even daring to compare them has no ears.
This album was the album that made my teenage years, if only I could relive them again.
Unique song, a new level of aesthetic pop music. The most beautiful looking and sounding band in pop/rock history.
My New Career is my favorite Japan song. Great to see it played live beautifully here, thanks.
The Prophet 5 is one of the most beautiful sounding synths ever made.
The OB-X too. Great combination here.
Karn is just total quality .
Mick's bass is bigger than HE was!
No, but it was big.
After listening to Japan for 40 years, their music still moves me.
RIP Mick Karn brilliant amazing fretless bassist 👍
great video, I can appreciate the play of Richard Barbieri on P5, Oberheim Obx, Moog microMoog, and Roland 100 Modular . first [ of the full discography] album of Japan that I bought in 1980, for me a pleasant obsession with Sakamoto, Karrn, Masami Tsuchyia, Bill Nelson and others too many to mention.
just every now and then a band like japan comes along, beyond compare in every respect. I lived with their music in the 80s. I still listen to it today. RIP Mick Karn.
The most underrated band of all time, in my opinion the best there ever was
Did You Know?
Cool was invented and became a descriptive word at precisely the same time that Mick Karn arrived.
70 and can't ecer get enugh
This is such a good version to one of the best songs ever written... ...love the bass.
+Xandro Lombardi to me theres only one other bass player that is as good and thats Mark King from lvl 42.
:-)
Unfortunately the bass is buried too deep in the mix throughout most of Swing. The keys are too loud too. The mix is better for My New Career.
Far out keyboard's
What more could you want ? David and co had everything...thanks for sharing your gifts with the world
I agree, Mike Karn was a genius, too bad he had to go earlier than expected, but such is life.... thanks for sharing
soooooo good. ...... never has been and never will be another sound like this! !
That comment about the 13 year-old-girls kinda pissed me off. I was 12/13 when I discovered Japan. Sure, I was enamored by their image initially but I realized quickly just how unique their sound was and rather sophisticated to my young ears. Here I am 30 years later and I (like others) grew up with them and sustained my affection during their long careers. Sometimes 13 year-old's should be trusted to know what they like. Humph.
agreed. that was a real sh*tty intro from the host(?)
Agrees im 12 and im obsessed with them!!!
this is my favourite Japan track.....sheer masterpiece...
I love this group and have continued to enjoy their music for 30 years, and I still have a huge crush on Mr Sylvian xxx and sadly RIP Mick Karn
What a bassline on My New Career. This takes me back - I was blown away, intrigued and thrilled by this band, it was nothing we had heard before. RIP Mick.
Listening to the sounds of the of the music and especially David's voice it's really apparent of how big of an influence that this band and other bands of this genre and similar genres influenced japanese music in the 80s in 90s. I could probably listen David's voice all day, its feels like velvet.
I agree, these guys were the fertile crescent of the 80's
Damn that was one mighty good bass guitarist!
Yes he was... 😢
He could play quite a few other instruments too, proper talented but they all were...
Mick Karn, the most authentic and recognisable bass player there ever was. Loved and missed. True genius🖤
Bloody amazing….after all these year…still so timeless, a true classic group. Nothing I hear today is so organic. So original. Cheers
saw these guys in Liverpool 1980 , they were amazing totally professional , one of the best "real" bands of the 80's also saw ultravox same venue , saw lots of bands around that time, but these two were the best ....brings back nice memories
Wow! The opening guitar and bass salvo from Rob and Mick is awesome! The intro to Swing, this version or the longer LP version, is one of my favourite song intros. Thanks for the HQ upload!
Such a wonderful video... David waiting with his hands in the pockets and Mick on the frontline playing his amazing bass line are the representation of pure style...
Why have I only seen this today 😮. Such an interesting and underrated band and still sounding fresh while transporting those of us who lived the 80s back to those best days.
41 years young and still sounds as good as the first time I heard it back in 1980!👌❤
Great to see this .I never get tired of listening to Japan,Went to see them on tin drum tour at D M Hall in Coventry , got the program signed back stage , Then crashed car in heavy snow on way home,oh happy days ,R I P Mik .
This is the best thing i have seen for ages,japan were so far ahead of there time,absolutely brilliant.haunting,so tight wow,everything is exceptional.anyone wanting to know anything about music should see this,.fantastic,thankyou so much.....Music nowadays is a sham,and there was this ,thank god i was an eighties child.
I don't even know howto thank you for all these clips. Japan are one of my favourite bands ever
This song is genius and that bassline is perfection!
I am a definite Mick Karn fan, but Richard and Rob provide sterling performances on synth and guitar respectively. Rob's solos on both tracks are to die for.
The bass sound is so fantastic!
One of the most beautiful male voices
Thanks for posting this wonderful Japan performance from The Old Grey Whistle Test. It is certainly one of their best. Sad to hear Mick Karn passed away last year but the Music and memories of those days live on. :)
i agree - thats the core of of early 80s new wave ...fantastic touches me deeply ..
Brilliant just brilliant band nothing like them now or since and Japans cover of Second that emotion is so cool on your ears
My absolute favourite band of all time ... I listen to them daily
Real musicians. Real music. Superb.
Mick Karn, the epitome of cool, and such skill, making the fret-less bass sound so unique and beautiful
Japan was one of the few bands in the 80s that turned music into art.
My Girlfriend at the time and her brother introduced me to Japan in 1990. Never looked back since! Mick Karn was legendary. David clearly the icing on the cake........The music is and will always be on point and out there, sexy, raw, super kool and the Look was just amazing!
My favourite Japan song.
Scott Walker would have loved it, and Mick Karn was a magnificent bass player. Japan were the true inheritors of early Roxy Music, before they became Mr Ferry's backing band.
This original band lineup was just too talented to stay together for a long time. Just way too much talent. Huge influence to so many subsequent groups. RIP Mick Karn. I never could predict what you were going to do on the bass next.
Mick Karn was one of my favourite bassists; he had a superb playing style.
This Band lifted me up through the 80's, far above the smoke and recession.
I LOVED this band
Beautiful, especially My New Career.. thanks for putting it up
Fretless is just amazing on this, Mick Karn you were an excellent talent. RIP fella.
stole my heart.... and still do xxxx
Fantastic Band of their time and so underrated. Great songs and musicians.
Mick Karn you are a Legend R.I.P.
Good to see the band with Rob Dean still in it, adding guitar solos for these particular live versions is fantastic.
There wasn’t really a need for him after this but its a lovely guitar sound he had.
This was a time when people were able to express themselves creatively and these guys certainly did.
Great artists in my opinion x peace and love x
proud that the boys were based near myself when they were at their paak.god bless you mick and r,i,p.you were class
Im 18 this year (probably one of the younger people in this comment section) and ive grown up with this music and always just saw it as "dad music" but the older i get the more i appreciate it and go back to it.
I’m younger and I love japan too bad no one around me even hears 80’s music 😔
Best band ever!!!!! RIP Mick Karn thanks for posting, so great!!!