Japan - Oil on Canvas

1



Album Details

Title: Oil on Canvas
Artist: Japan
Release Date: 6/1983
Re-Released On: 7/2/2008
Label: Virgin, Blue Plate, Slowburn, EMI Music Distribution
Duration: 71:58
Album Type(s): live
UPCs: 017046183222, 094636305325, 4988006816152, 4988006864047, 0077778647959, 498800681615
Genre: Rock
Styles: Synth Pop, New Wave, Post-Punk, New Romantic, Alternative/Indie Rock, Punk/New Wave, Art Rock
Moods: Complex, Brooding, Cerebral, Detached, Elegant, Literate, Refined/Mannered, Somber, Sophisticated, Stylish, Dreamy, Eerie, Melancholy, Nocturnal, Ominous, Plaintive, Reflective, Restrained, Sparse, Theatrical, Wintry, Wistful, Insular, Sleazy, Swaggering, Tense/Anxious, Trashy
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Oil on Canvas
  2. Sons of Pioneers
  3. Gentlemen Take Polaroids
  4. Swing
  5. Cantonese Boy
  6. Visions of China
  7. Ghosts
  8. Voices Raised in Welcome, Hands Held in Prayer
  9. Nightporter
  10. Still Life in Mobile Homes
  11. Methods of Dance
  12. Quiet Life
  13. The Art of Parties
  14. Canton
  15. Temple of Dawn

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2008CDVirgin68874
2007CDSlowburn68603/4
2007CDEMI Music Distribution63053
1992CDBlue Plate1832

Other Editions

Similar CDs

Album Review

The final Japan release was sold and marketed as a live album, though actually it's a bit of a catchall -- it is indeed mostly from concerts, but also includes a variety of studio instrumentals and a re-recorded version of "Nightporter" mixed in to sound like it's part of the show. The various re-releases of the albums over the years confused matters further, with re-sequencings, the excision of cuts, and more adding to general confusion about the release (not to mention the fact that some reissues completely omitted where the shows were recorded anyway!). Two of the instrumentals, "Oil on Canvas" itself and "Temple of Dawn," are brief, gentle pieces by Sylvian and Barbieri respectively. "Voices Raised in Welcome, Hands Held in Prayer" is a more involving effort, combining a quiet, gamelan-inspired rhythm with found-sound samples from what appears to be a religious ceremony. As for "Nightporter," it's a nice enough new version but isn't notably different or varied from the earlier studio take. The remaining live cuts show that the exquisite tension and serene sounds in the studio were easily transferred to the stage in all their elegant complexity. The Tin Drum selections, which make up most of the release, make the case even more that Japan was as much a prog band as a glam one, Sylvian's captivating vocals flowing over Asian-derived scales and melodies, the guitar parts handled by guest performer Masami Tsuchiya, who also plays some keyboards. "Visions of China" sounds especially grand, Jansen's entrancing drumming seemingly impossible to be created and yet clearly existing. The extended introduction to "Ghosts," Karn's saxophone welling up from the distance like a siren call, is another highlight, along with the slightly rocked-up -- but only just -- "Methods of Dance." ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
David SylvianGuitar, Keyboards, Vocals, Concept
Fin CostelloPhotography
JapanProducer
John PunterProducer, Engineer
Masami TsuchiyaTapes, Guitar, Keyboards
Mick KarnClarinet, Vocals, Saxophone, Bass, Flute
Nigel WalkerEngineer, Producer
Richard BarbieriKeyboards, Vocals
Steve JansenMarimba, Drums, Vocals
Tony CousinsRemastering