Japan had some terrific avant garde at the time, many of its bands had humoristic sensibilities, but were serious in being innovative in music. This song to me is a great example, it shouldn't sound good as most instruments are highly compressed and saturated, but it does. It has long passages of harmonic dissonance but still resolve in the tonic. Love it.
80s Music
Jam out to 80's music! Post some music and let's talk about it.
Rules
- All aspects of the LW TOS apply.
- Be constructive and don't gatekeep. People have different tastes in music; deal with it.
- If the source is YouTube, use the actual YouTube URL and not some random Invidious/Piped link. This prevents dead links as those go on/offline or break due to Google changes while also letting people's browser plugins, Lemmy clients, etc automatically re-write those to their preferred instances. Feel free to put alternate links in the post body, though.
- Submissions must be from the 80s (1980 - 1989) based on either recorded or release date. e.g. if it was recorded in 1989 but released in 1990, we're not going to split hairs over that; post away. Covers made in the 80s of older music is absolutely allowed and encouraged.
Posting Guidelines / Suggestions
- The preferred title format is
Artist - Song Name [YEAR]
- If a song has a particular meaning or evokes a pleasant memory for you, feel free to share your story with it.
If you have other suggestions that would help grow the community and/or foster discussion, please feel free to share.
Killer song. Fun, thoughtful, ahead of its time.
While their contemporaries in Düsseldorf, and later Detroit, were using synthesizer technology to create bleak dystopian music, YMO introduced a more "joyous and liberating" approach to electronic music. According to Sakamoto, they were "tired" of Japanese musicians imitating Western and American music at the time and so they wanted to "make something very original from Japan."[49] Kraftwerk was particularly an influence on Sakamoto, who heard the band in the mid-1970s and later introduced them to his fellow band members.[49] They were impressed with Kraftwerk's "very formalized" style but wanted to avoid imitating their "very German" approach. He described Kraftwerk's music as "theoretical, very focused, simple and minimal and strong".[50] Their alternative template for electronic pop was less minimalistic, made more varying use of synthesizer lines, introduced "fun-loving and breezy" sounds,[51] and placed a strong emphasis on melody[49] in contrast to Kraftwerk's statuesque "robot pop".[52]
The band also drew from a wider range of influences than had been employed by Kraftwerk.[31] These influences on YMO included Japanese electronic music (such as Isao Tomita),[53] traditional Japanese music, experimental Chinese music (of the Cultural Revolution era),[49] Indian music (such as Ravi Shankar and Bollywood music),[19] arcade game samples,[16][54] American rap,[32] exotica,[31] Caribbean ska,[31] Giorgio Moroder's disco work,[4] the Beatles, the Beach Boys and their leader Brian Wilson,[55] Van Dyke Parks,[citation needed] classical music,[11] animal sounds,[56] and noise.[57] Sakamoto has expressed that his "concept when making music is that there is no border between music and noise."[57]