David Sylvian
David Sylvian (born David Batt) (born February 23, 1958), in the town of Catford, in the borough of Lewisham, of the traditional county of Kent, now Greater London, England, is an iconoclastic British singer and songwriter who first rose to fame as the lead vocalist of the band Japan in the late 1970s. Japan, whose other members included Mick Karn, Rob Dean, Richard Barbieri and Sylvian's brother Steve Jansen, began its career as a group of friends who grew up together with a common vision and as children played music together as a means of escape, playing David's two-chord numbers, sometimes with Mick as the frontman, sometimes with David as the frontman. David really has his parents to thank for his musical career as it was they who, on Christmas of 1973 gave drums to Steve and a guitar to David.
Eventually, they became a glam rock outfit in the mold of David Bowie and The New York Dolls, but quickly altered their musical approach to become one of the first bands in the early-1980s New Romantic movement. Their look and sound followed the lead of Roxy Music and presaged such acts as Duran Duran. After a successful tour, they broke up, in 1982, and Sylvian pursued a solo career. Their final show was on December 16, 1982 in Nagoya, Japan. The live album from this tour, called Oil On Canvas charted well in the UK.
Sylvian's singing met with a great deal of early criticism for sounding affected, and too much in imitation of Roxy Music's frontman Bryan Ferry. But by the end of Japan's run, his voice had begun to mature into its own distinctive baritone.
The usual recounting of the ending of Japan has to do with various interpersonal relationships, tensions therein including Sylvian linking with Yuka Fujii, a photographer, artist and designer who also happened to be (formerly) Mick Karn's girlfriend. There are comparisons here to John, Paul and Yoko and Let It Be. The parallels are pretty obvious but things aren't always what they seem.
According to David, in an interview with Mojo Magazine, from April, 1999, the real reason for the break-up was Mick's demo'ing songs for his first solo album and thus betraying an unspoken rule within the band and that was that all their musical energies would be poured into the band. "I gave Mick the ultimatum: if you want a solo career, let's break the band up. He said, 'I'd like to keep the group going as well' - a safety net, and that didn't feel right."
The importance of Yuka in David's life can't be underestimated. Through Yuka, Sylvian was introduced to the world of Jazz music, which gave him the inspiration to continue the direction that began with the Japan track, Ghosts. This, as well as an incorporation of spiritual discipline into daily life are some of what she brought to his life. Fujii had come to England from her native Japan for many reasons, one of which was to take photographs of British Jazz musicians. She was an established and serious artist. With David, she formed Opium (Arts) partly so David could make sure the aesthetics were always right. Indeed, throughout David's solo career, Yuka has had a role in the design, often handling the cover art entirely herself. Throughout the 1980s, they explored spirituality and Art.
Sylvian's debut solo album, Brilliant Trees (1984), met with critical acclaim and yielded the single "Red Guitar". His follow-up was an ambitious two-record set, Gone to Earth (1986), which flouted convention (and perhaps commercial wisdom) by featuring one record of vocal pop songs and one consisting entirely of atmospheric instrumentals. Guest artists included Robert Fripp and Bill Nelson.
His third album, Secrets of the Beehive (1987), was more acoustic and oriented towards somber, emotive ballads. It yielded one of Sylvian's most well-received songs, "Orpheus," and was supported by his first solo tour, 1988's "In Praise of Shamans".
Never one to conform to commercial expectations, Sylvian then collaborated on several ambient projects with artists like Holger Czukay and Russell Mills.
In 1991, a highly-anticipated Japan reunion fizzled. Sylvian insisted on calling the project and the album Rain Tree Crow, to the dismay of both his label Virgin Records (who were hoping for a hit "comeback" album) and his former bandmates. Sylvian reportedly assumed a controlling temperament over the entire recording, turning the record, in effect, into his newest solo project. This badly alienated Karn, who has not associated with Sylvian personally or professionally to this day. Like Tin Drum, the Rain Tree Crow recordings were a breakthrough in performance and recording.
For whatever reasons Yuka and David were no more shortly after RTC and Ingrid Chavez, of the Prince circle of people, sent Sylvian a copy of her first record. David liked what he heard and found her voice fit in perfectly with what he'd been working on with Riuchi Sakamoto. The Heartbeat single was what appeared from this. After a tumultuous beginning, David and Ingrid decided to travel together throughout the UK and the U.S., eventually settling there.
In 1993, Sylvian startled many of his long-term fans by teaming with Robert Fripp on the album The First Day, which married Sylvian's philosophical lyrics to hard-driving progressive rock songs very much in the mold of Fripp's band King Crimson. The album's centerpiece was a dance track, "Darshan," over 17 minutes in length. This was released as its own EP with a remix by Future Sound of London.
Following a tour for the album, Fripp reportedly asked Sylvian to join his newest incarnation of King Crimson (which would go on to release the album Thrak in 1994). Sylvian declined on the grounds that he didn't want to join a band with an established history, and then he and Fripp had an acrimonious split. A live album from their tour, Damage, was released in 1994, which Sylvian remixed and re-released to his liking in 2001.
There followed a period of musical inactivity during which Sylvian married singer Ingrid Chavez and settled in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prior, they lived for sometime in Sonoma, California to be close to their guru. They have two daughters, each with Sanskrit names. Chavez pursues her interest in photography and music. In 1999, Sylvian released Dead Bees on a Cake, his first solo album since Beehive. It showed the most eclectic influence of all his recordings, ranging from soul to jazz fusion to Eastern spiritual chants, and most of the songs' lyrics reflected the now over-40 Sylvian's inner peace from his marriage, family and beliefs. Guest artists included longtime friend Ryuichi Sakamoto, as well as Talvin Singh and Bill Frisell.
Following Dead Bees, Sylvian released a few compilations through Virgin, the retrospective Everything & Nothing and Camphor, which collected several of his ambient collaborations. Then Sylvian parted ways with Virgin (for whom he had never exactly been a chart-topper) and launched his own independent label, Samadhi Sound. In 2003 he released the album Blemish and announced a tour.
Neither Sylvian nor Japan meant much in the States, but the chosen name of Japan had seen their career taking off in that country; around the time of the first solo album a link with Ryuichi Sakamoto had been established with the soundtrack music for the Nagisa Oshima film "Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence" (starring David Bowie), in which Sakamoto made his debut as an actor resulting in a hit single called "Forbidden Colours" credited to Sylvian/Sakamoto. A year or so later Sakamoto produced an album for Virginia Astley and Sylvian was brought in as a guest for the song "Some Small Hope".
Fujii and Sylvian collaborated in 2004, participating in an exhibition called Minus One. In the Aldwych Underground Tube Station, The Strand, London. In empty phone boxes Fujii provided digital photographs and Sylvian the accompanying texts. This was 28 & 29 January 2004, 14:00 - 20:00, 30 January 2004, 14:00 - 18:00.