Ryuichi Sakamoto was born and raised in Japan. He rose to prominence as a member of Yellow Magic Orchestra, essentially the most influential Japanese band in pop-music historical past. Final week, he died in Japan. However he additionally claimed to not take into account himself Japanese. That displays the dedication of his life’s work as a composer and performer to cross-cultural inspiration, collaboration, and synthesis. How becoming that the announcement of his demise this previous weekend ought to elicit an outpouring of tributes from followers and colleagues all over the world, sharing his work from a wide range of completely different stylistic and technological durations in a wide range of completely different languages.
Becoming, as nicely, that the primary documentary made about Sakamoto as a solo artist ought to have been directed by a Frenchwoman, the photographer Elizabeth Lennard. Shot in 1984, Tokyo melody: un movie sur Ryuichi Sakamoto captures not solely Sakamoto himself on the rise as a world cultural determine, but in addition a Japan that had not too long ago change into the red-hot middle — at the very least within the world creativeness — of wealth, expertise, and even forward-looking creativeness. It was within the Japanese capital that Sakamoto recorded Ongaku Zukan, or Illustrated Musical Encyclopedia, the album that confirmed the listening public, in Japan and elsewhere, what it actually sounded wish to make music not simply in however of the late twentieth century.
Or maybe it was music for the Finish of Historical past. “Japan has change into the main capitalist nation,” Sakamoto says in Tokyo Melody. “I don’t know if it’s good or dangerous. The season of politics is over. Individuals don’t consider rebelling. Alternatively they’ve an actual starvation for tradition.” Then comes the footage of wax mannequin meals and obsessively ersatz nineteen-fifties-style greasers: clichéd representations of city Japan on the time, sure, but in addition real reflections of the someway refined mix-and-match retro-kitsch sensibility that had come to prevail there. “Mainstream tradition has misplaced its authority,” Sakamoto provides. “There’s a floating notion of values. Know-how is progressing by itself. The gears transfer an increasing number of effectively. We really feel prospects showing that exceed our creativeness and our horizons.”
For almost forty years therafter, Sakamoto would proceed to discover this vary of prospects — chic, weird, and even threatening — via his music, whether or not on his personal releases, his initiatives with different artists, or his many movie soundtracks for a variety of auteurs together with Nagisa Ōshima (for whom he additionally acted, alongside David Bowie, in Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence), Brian De Palma, Bernardo Bertolucci, and Alejandro Iñarritu. In Tokyo Melody he reveals one secret of his success: “After I work with Japanese, I change into Japanese. After I work with Westerners, I attempt to be like them.” Therefore the best way, irrespective of the inventive or cultural context, Sakamoto’s music was by no means identifiable as both Japanese or Western, however at all times identifiable as his personal.
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Based mostly in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and tradition. His initiatives embrace the Substack e-newsletter Books on Cities, the e-book The Stateless Metropolis: a Stroll via Twenty first-Century Los Angeles and the video collection The Metropolis in Cinema. Observe him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Fb.