Big in Japan

Big in Japan

:"For the 1984 song by Alphaville, see "Big in Japan"; for the song by Tom Waits, see his album "Mule Variations" from 1999Infobox musical artist
Name = Big in Japan
Background = group_or_band


Img_capt = Big in Japan's EP with singer Jayne Casey prominent on the cover
Origin = Liverpool, England
Genre = Punk
Label = Zoo
Years_active = 1977 - 1979
Past_members = Budgie
Ian Broudie
Bill Drummond
David Balfe
Jayne Casey
Holly Johnson
Kev Ward
Phil Allen

Big in Japan was a punk band that emerged from Liverpool, England in the late 1970s. They are better known for the later successes of their band members than for their own music. According to the "Liverpool Echo", Big in Japan were "a supergroup with a difference - its members only became super after they left."Shennan, P., "Memories of Eric's ; Paddy Shennan recalls the sights and sounds of legendary club Eric's", "Liverpool Echo", 20 September 2003, Features p26.]

History

Coming from the same Merseyside scene as Echo & the Bunnymen, The Teardrop Explodes, OMD and Dalek I Love You, Big in Japan formed in late 1977. They started off playing gigs around Liverpool, such as Ruffwood School in Kirkby along with Wah! Heat, but most notably at the seminal Eric's Club. Their stage show was unique: lead singer Jayne Casey would perform with a lampshade over her shaved head, guitarist Bill Drummond played in a kilt and bassist Holly Johnson performed in a flamboyant manner which he would later take further in Frankie Goes to Hollywood.

Jayne Casey would later state:cquote|We were all a bit too eccentric at a time when punk was quite macho and clear cut...a bit too much for people to handle. We always wanted to be like The Monkees or something. We wanted to be a cartoon, and that's how we tried to sell ourselves to the record companies. [Jayne Casey interviewed by Lin Sangster, 1993 ( [http://www.appelstein.com/cif/jaynecasey.html link] )]

Ian Broudie said that "It was more performance art than rock'n'roll. But it gave me a healthy disregard for musicianship. It's ideas that are important, not proficiency." [Pattenden, M., "A Broudie guy", "The Times" (1FA Edition, London), 30 October 1999, p8.]

Hatred of the band reached such a level that a petition calling on them to split up was launched by a jealous young Julian Cope. Displayed in local shop Probe Records the petition gathered 2000 Fact|date=February 2007 signatures including those of the band themselves. [Reynolds, Simon, "Rip It Up And Start Again: Post-punk 1978-1984", ISBN 0-571-21570-X] According to Cope's autobiography, "Of course, Bill Drummond was into the whole thing and told us we needed 14,000 signatures, then they'd split up. We got about nine." [cite book | last = Cope | first = Julian | authorlink = Julian Cope| title=Head-On/Repossessed | publisher=Thorsons Publishers | year=2000 | pages = p. 60 of "Head On"| id=ISBN 0-7225-3882-0]

The band broke up in 1978, but recorded "From Y To Z and Never Again" afterwards to pay off debts. The unintentional consequence of the E.P. was the formation of the seminal Zoo label, which went on to release early material by Echo & the Bunnymen and The Teardrop Explodes, amongst others. They also recorded a Peel Session on 12 February 1979, with a lineup of Casey, Broudie, Johnson and Budgie; the session was broadcast on 6 March 1979. [cite book|title=The Peel Sessions|author=Garner, Ken|publisher=BBC Books|year=2007|page=p258|isbn=978-1-84607-326-7]

Big in Japan left a recorded legacy of seven songs: one on a single, four on their E.P. "From Y to Z and Never Again", and two released on a compilation. As of 2005, five out of these recorded songs are commercially available, on the compilation CD "Zoo Label: Uncaged".

Discography

ingles and EPs

* "Brutality, Religion and a Dance Beat" (1977)
* "From Y to Z and Never Again" (1978)

Compilations

* "Street To Street: A Liverpoool Album" (1978)
* "To the Shores of Lake Placid" (1982)
* " 'The Zoo' Uncaged 1978-1982" (1990)

Other work

Three unreleased songs were recorded for the band's only John Peel session of 6 March 1979 - "Suicide High Life", "Goodbye" and "Don't Bomb China."

A bootleg CD is in circulation which contains all of the material listed above as well as demo versions of "Society for Cutting Up Men", "Boys Cry", "Big in Japan", "Space Walk" and "Match of the Day and Taxi." It also contains the audio from the band's performance of "Suicide A Go Go" on their Granada TV appearance of 23 March 1978 (on Tony Wilson's "So It Goes").

Black and white amateur home movie footage of the band performing live at Eric's still exists - excerpts of the band performing both "Big In Japan" and "Cindy And The Barbi Dolls" were used in the BBC's "" TV program, originally transmitted in August 1995 and repeated in 1997.

Members

* Budgie - later of The Slits and then Siouxsie & the Banshees
* Ian Broudie - later of Original Mirrors, Care, The Lightning Seeds and a respected producer
* Bill Drummond - later of Lori & the Chameleons, the Zoo record label, the JAMs, and The KLF
* David Balfe - later also of Lori & the Chameleons, and The Teardrop Explodes and the Food record label
* Jayne Casey - later of Pink Military and Pink Industry and then leading light in the Liverpool club and arts scenes
* Holly Johnson - later of Frankie Goes to Hollywood and solo artist
* Kev Ward and Phil Allen - no further musical activity ["Big in Japan - Where are they now?", "Q Magazine", January 1992 ( [http://www.libraryofmu.org/display-resource.php?id=271 link] ). No mention of David Balfe.]

Notes & references


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Big in Japan — «Big in Japan» Sencillo de Alphaville del álbum Forever Young Lado A Big in Japan Lado B Seeds Formato Sencillo 7 Maxi sencillo 12 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Big Man Japan — 大日本人 Japanese poster art Directed by Hitoshi Matsumoto Produced by A …   Wikipedia

  • Big in Japan — bezeichnet eine britische Punkband, siehe Big in Japan (Band) ein Lied der deutschen Gruppe Alphaville, siehe Big in Japan (Lied) ein Lied von Tom Waits Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Big In Japan — war eine britische Punk Musikgruppe aus Liverpool. Sie wurde in den späten 1970er Jahren gegründet. Zum Lineup zählten Jayne Casey (Gesang), Bill Drummond (Gitarre), Holly Johnson (Bassgitarre), Peter Clarke (Schlagzeug), Ian Broudie sowie David… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • big in Japan — Meaning Originally a self aggrandising claim of a rock group or other stage act who aren t successful in their own country. Now used ironically to describe any failing act. Origin Second division rock groups who couldn t make the charts back home …   Meaning and origin of phrases

  • Big In Japan (banda) — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Éste artículo se refiere a la banda de punk rock británica. Hay otra con el mismo nombre que está activa en la década presente. Big In Japan Información personal Origen Liverpool, Merseyside, Inglaterra …   Wikipedia Español

  • Big in Japan (Lied) — Big in Japan ist ein 1984 veröffentlichtes Lied von Alphaville, das von Marian Gold, Bernhard Lloyd und Frank Mertens geschrieben wurde. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Geschichte 2 Hintergrund 3 Coverversionen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Big in Japan (Band) — Big in Japan war eine britische Punk Musikgruppe aus Liverpool. Sie wurde in den späten 1970er Jahren gegründet. Zum Lineup zählten Jayne Casey (Gesang), Bill Drummond (später The KLF, Gitarre), Holly Johnson (später Frankie Goes To Hollywood,… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Big in Japan (группа) — Эта статья о рок группе; о феномене см.: Big in Japan (феномен). Big in Japan Жанры панк рок пост панк Годы 1977 1978 …   Википедия

  • Big in Japan (song) — Infobox Single Name = Big in Japan Cover size = Border = Caption = Artist = Alphaville Album = Forever Young A side = B side = Released = 1984 Format = 7 single …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”