Gentlemen Take Polaroids
Gentlemen Take Polaroids | ||||
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Studio album by Japan | ||||
Released | 24 October 1980 | |||
Recorded | 1980 | |||
Studio | AIR Studios and Townhouse Studios, London, England | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 46:26 | |||
Label | Virgin | |||
Producer | John Punter | |||
Japan chronology | ||||
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Singles from Gentlemen Take Polaroids | ||||
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Gentlemen Take Polaroids is the fourth studio album by the English band Japan, released on 24 October 1980 by record label Virgin.
Background
Gentlemen Take Polaroids was the band's first album for the Virgin Records label, after leaving Hansa-Ariola, who had released their first three albums, some months earlier. It continued in the vein of their previous album Quiet Life, utilising a combination of electronic elements coupled with more traditional instruments. This was the last Japan album to feature guitarist Rob Dean, who left the band in spring 1981.
Release
The album was preceded by the release of the title track as a single in October 1980, which peaked at number 60 in the UK Singles Chart, the group's first single to chart.[2]
Gentlemen Take Polaroids was released on 24 October 1980. It was moderately successful in the UK, where it peaked at number 51.[2] The album was later certified Gold by the BPI in 1986 for 100,000 copies sold.[3]
No further singles were immediately taken from the album, though "Nightporter" (influenced by the works of French composer Erik Satie, most particularly his Gymnopedies) was remixed and released as a single in November 1982, just after the band announced that it was splitting. It peaked at number 29 in the UK Singles Chart, though both the edited 7" version and the full-length 12" remix remain unreleased on CD to this day.
The album was reissued in 2003, with slightly different cover art (taken from the same photo session as the original cover) and three bonus tracks (see below).
Reception
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
Smash Hits | [5] |
Trouser Press | positive[6] |
Gentlemen Take Polaroids has been well received by critics. Writing in Smash Hits magazine in November 1980, Steve Taylor gave the album 8/10 and wrote: "If Brian Eno, rather than Bryan Ferry, had rerouted the original direction of Roxy Music, this might well have been the result..."[5]
In his retrospective review, Ned Raggett of AllMusic called it "unquestionably the album in which Japan truly found its own unique voice and aesthetic approach."[4] The Quietus wrote that the album "took the sound of Quiet Life and refined it into a series of oblique, almost cinematic avant-pop creations that exquisitely surround the frontman’s woozy post-Bryan Ferry croon in layers of pop textures that sounded like little else by Japan’s contemporaries.[1]
Track listing
All tracks written by David Sylvian, except as noted.
Side A | ||
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No. | Title | Length |
1. | "Gentlemen Take Polaroids" | 7:08 |
2. | "Swing" | 6:23 |
3. | "Burning Bridges†" | 5:23 |
4. | "My New Career" | 3:52 |
Side B | |||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
1. | "Methods of Dance" | 6:53 | |
2. | "Ain't That Peculiar" | Smokey Robinson, Warren "Pete" Moore, Marvin Tarplin, Bobby Rogers | 4:40 |
3. | "Nightporter" | 6:57 | |
4. | "Taking Islands in Africa" | Ryuichi Sakamoto, Sylvian | 5:12 |
† The track "Burning Bridges" was put on the album as a last minute replacement for a track titled "Some Kind of Fool", with quite a lot of UK and German pressings of the album listing this song on the inner sleeve and on the track listings. The track was also going to be released as a single, but this was replaced by "Nightporter". An overdubbed version with new lyrics was released on Sylvian's solo "Everything & Nothing" album in 2000, but the Japan version has never been released.[7]
2003 CD reissue bonus tracks | |||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
9. | "The Experience of Swimming" | Richard Barbieri | 4:04 |
10. | "The Width of a Room" | Rob Dean | 3:14 |
11. | "Taking Islands in Africa" (Steve Nye Remix) | 4:53 |
Singles
Year | Song | UK Chart | Additional information |
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1980 | "Gentlemen Take Polaroids" | 60 | released as a double single pack: "Gentlemen Take Polaroids" (edit)/"The Experience of Swimming" and "The Width Of A Room"/"Burning Bridges" (a Sylvian-produced version unavailable elsewhere) |
1982 | "Nightporter" | 29 | released edited and remixed with "Ain't That Peculiar" (remix) on the 7" single and "Methods of Dance" on the 12" single |
Personnel
- Japan
- David Sylvian – vocals, synthesizers (ARP Omni, Oberheim OB-X, Minimoog, Roland System 700), piano, electric guitar
- Mick Karn – fretless bass guitar, oboe, saxophone, recorder
- Steve Jansen – drums, synthesizer (Roland System 700, Sequential Circuits Prophet 5), percussion
- Richard Barbieri – synthesizers (Roland System 700, Micromoog, Polymoog, Prophet 5, Oberheim OB-X, Roland Jupiter 4), sequencer, piano
- Rob Dean – guitar, ebow
- Additional personnel
- Ryuichi Sakamoto – synthesizers
- Simon House – violin on "My New Career"
- Cyo – vocals on "Methods of Dance"
- Barry Guy – double bass
- Andrew Cauthery – oboe
- Technical
- John Punter – production, mixing, recording, engineering
- Colin Fairley – recording, engineering
- Nigel Walker – recording, engineering
- Steve Prestage – recording, engineering
- Nicola Tyson – back cover
- Stuart McLeod – front cover
References
- 1 2 3 Burnett, Joseph. "Thirty Years On: Japan's Oil On Canvas Revisited". The Quietus. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
- 1 2 "Japan - Artist - Official Charts". Official Charts. Retrieved December 20, 2014.
- ↑ British Phonographic Industry online database
- 1 2 Raggett, Ned. "Gentlemen Take Polaroids – Japan - Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards - AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved December 20, 2014.
- 1 2 Taylor, Steve (13 November 1980). "Album Reviews (Japan – "Gentlemen Take Polaroids")". Smash Hits. EMAP Metro. 2 (23): 29.
- ↑ Robbins, Ira; Aswad, Jem. "TrouserPress.com :: Japan". TrouserPress.com. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
- ↑ "Gentlemen Take Polaroids – Japan". Nightporter. Retrieved August 29, 2016.
External links
- Gentlemen Take Polaroids at Discogs (list of releases)