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Crystal Japan
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| "Crystal Japan" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ||||
| Single by David Bowie | ||||
| B-side | "Alabama Song" | |||
| Released | Spring 1980 | |||
| Recorded | 1979 | |||
| Genre | Ambient | |||
| Length | 3:08 | |||
| Label | RCA | |||
| Songwriter | David Bowie | |||
| Producers | ||||
| David Bowie singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
"Crystal Japan" is an instrumental piece written by David Bowie and released as a single in Japan in spring 1980.[1] It was recorded during the Scary Monsters sessions that year.[2][3] The instrumental was used in a Japanese commercial for the shochu Crystal Jun Rock, which also featured an appearance by Bowie, although he said at the time that the track was not specifically written for this purpose.[4] Originally titled "Fuji Moto San",[5] it was apparently intended to close the Scary Monsters album until replaced by "It's No Game (No. 2)".[2][3]
Track listing
[edit]- "Crystal Japan" (David Bowie) – 3:08
- "Alabama Song" (Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill) – 3:51
Other releases
[edit]- The instrumental was released as the B-side to the single "Up the Hill Backwards" in March 1981. "Teenage Wildlife" was originally slated as the B-side for "Up the Hill Backwards" until Bowie found out the prices fans were paying for the import single of "Crystal Japan", and insisted the track receive a UK release.[citation needed]
- In 1992, the piece was released as a bonus track on the Rykodisc reissue of the album Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps).
- "Crystal Japan" also appeared on the compilations Rare (1982) and All Saints (2001), and on Re:Call 3, part of the A New Career in a New Town (1977–1982) boxed set (2017).[6]
- Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails took the melody of "Crystal Japan" and used it as the basis for the track "A Warm Place", released on their 1994 album The Downward Spiral.[7] Bowie's official website later said the two songs were so similar that "A Warm Place" was "a thinly-veiled cover" of "Crystal Japan".[8]
Notes
[edit]- ^ "Crystal Japan". Pushing Ahead of the Dame. 1 September 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
- ^ a b Chris O'Leary (2019). Ashes to Ashes: The Songs of David Bowie, 1976-2016: p. 163
- ^ a b Nicholas Pegg (2016). The Complete David Bowie: p. 67
- ^ Roy Carr & Charles Shaar Murray (1981). Bowie: An Illustrated Record: p.108
- ^ David Buckley (1999). Strange Fascination – David Bowie: The Definitive Story: p.366
- ^ "A NEW CAREER IN A NEW TOWN (1977 – 1982) - David Bowie Latest News". DavidBowie.com. 22 July 2016. Archived from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ Hamish Brown (20 February 2013). "The best David Bowie tracks you've never heard". The List. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
- ^ "Japanese Crystal Japan Tv Campaign And 45 Are Thirty". DavidBowie.com. 7 April 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
References
[edit]- Pegg, Nicholas, The Complete David Bowie, Reynolds & Hearn Ltd, 2000, ISBN 978-1-903111-14-7
External links
[edit]Crystal Japan
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
Background
Origins and commission
In early 1980, David Bowie was commissioned by the Japanese company Takara Shuzo to compose and provide an original instrumental track for their advertising campaign promoting Crystal Jun Rock, a shōchū distilled spirit akin to sake.[2] The resulting piece, "Crystal Japan," was written and recorded during the initial sessions for Bowie's forthcoming album Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps), which began that February at The Power Station studio in New York.[3] Bowie traveled to Kyoto in March 1980 to film the commercial at a temple site.[1] Bowie's longstanding fascination with Japanese culture and aesthetics played a key role in his acceptance of the commission. In a 1978 interview, he described his early exposure to kabuki theater, which sparked a deeper interest in Japan's cultural and religious dimensions, including its disciplined artistry and spiritual traditions.[4] This affinity, evident in his visits to Kyoto—where he stayed for weeks in 1979 and even considered relocating—aligned with the campaign's need for an evocative soundtrack.[4] Emerging from the experimental phase of his Berlin Trilogy (Low, “Heroes”, and Lodger), Bowie sought opportunities that allowed creative exploration beyond conventional rock structures. For the Takara Shuzo project, he opted for an instrumental composition to capture a mood of serene exoticism, mirroring the brand's promotional imagery of tranquil temples and gardens, as seen in the advertisements filmed at Kyoto sites.[5]Connection to Scary Monsters sessions
The recording sessions for David Bowie's 1980 album Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) began in February 1980 at The Power Station studio in New York, with subsequent work conducted at Good Earth Studios in London.[3] The piece was initially considered as a potential closer for Scary Monsters, offering a serene, atmospheric counterpoint to the album's intense thematic arc.[3] Producer Tony Visconti, collaborating closely with Bowie, played a pivotal role in finalizing the album's tracklist during the London phase, emphasizing cohesion and narrative flow by selecting material that unified the record's raw, angular energy.[3] As a result, "Crystal Japan" was ultimately dropped from the album in favor of "It's No Game (Part 2)", which better encapsulated the project's cyclical structure and emotional intensity.[3] This decision aligned with the track's standalone promotional purpose, positioning it outside the album's core sequence to serve the advertisement independently. The single "Crystal Japan" was issued in Japan on July 5, 1980, backed with Bowie's 1978 recording of "Alabama Song", appearing just two months before Scary Monsters' global launch on September 12, 1980.[6][7] This timing allowed the track to function as a market-specific teaser, bridging Bowie's studio work with his commercial endeavors in Asia ahead of the full album rollout.[8]Recording and production
Studio work
The recording of "Crystal Japan" took place at The Power Station in New York City during the sessions for David Bowie's 1980 album Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps), spanning February to April 1980. Commissioned for a Japanese shochu advertising campaign, the track was developed as a quick extension of the album work, allowing for a focused production timeline. Bowie performed all instruments on the synth-heavy instrumental, layering atmospheric sounds through synthesizers to establish its core texture.[1] Overdubbing techniques were central to the process, with multi-tracked synth lines added to build a meditative flow without extensive complexity. Producer Tony Visconti contributed heavily treated falsetto vocals via overdubs, enhancing the layered quality in a single, efficient session. This approach maintained a minimalist structure suited to the track's commercial purpose. Mixing decisions prioritized effects processing, including reverb and delay on the vocals and instrumentation to create an ethereal ambiance, with Visconti finalizing the balance. The resulting piece clocks in at 3:26, reflecting deliberate brevity for the advertisement format.Personnel involved
David Bowie composed "Crystal Japan" and performed all instruments on the track, including synthesizers and keyboards, making it a primarily solo effort during the Scary Monsters sessions.[1] Tony Visconti co-produced the song alongside Bowie and contributed falsetto vocals, adding subtle texture to the mix.[1] Visconti also handled engineering duties, consistent with his role on the broader Scary Monsters album. Unlike the album's core tracks, which featured a full band including drummer Dennis Davis and bassist George Murray, "Crystal Japan" involved no additional session musicians, emphasizing Bowie's direct control over its synth-driven sound.[5]Composition
Musical structure
"Crystal Japan" follows an intro-verse-chorus-verse-outro format typical of Bowie's instrumental works from the period, characterized by a gradual progression that emphasizes atmospheric development over abrupt changes. The track is an ambient instrumental featuring synthesizers that establish a serene, ethereal mood.[9] Composed in G major at approximately 80 beats per minute, the piece adopts a deliberate, unhurried tempo that contributes to its introspective pace, allowing the listener to immerse in its subtle nuances without rhythmic urgency. This key and tempo choice aligns with the song's aim to evoke tranquility, drawing briefly on Japanese cultural influences in the melodic phrasing to infuse a sense of exotic serenity.[10] The instrumentation centers on a dominant synthesizer melody line, doubled with lush string-like swells for added depth and emotional resonance, underpinned by sparse bass undertones that provide subtle harmonic support. Notably absent are drums or percussive elements, preserving the track's serene quality and preventing any disruption to its ambient flow. This arrangement highlights Bowie's skill in crafting mood through minimalism, with electronic elements evoking a dreamlike landscape.[6] With a runtime of 3:10, "Crystal Japan" is paced to allow the first half to methodically establish its mood through introductory layers and thematic introduction, while the second half develops the central motif with increasing intensity before a soft denouement, ensuring a cohesive arc that lingers in the listener's mind.[9]Stylistic influences
"Crystal Japan" draws from Bowie's post-ambient experimentation from the Berlin era, particularly the 1977 album Heroes, where electronic textures merged with exotic timbres, such as the koto on "Moss Garden." Recorded amid the Scary Monsters sessions, "Crystal Japan" extends this blend, infusing Krautrock-inspired electronics with Eastern exoticism for a hypnotic, otherworldly feel. The track evokes the ambient style of Bowie's Berlin Trilogy.[11][1] As a bespoke piece for a Japanese shochu advertisement, the track was tailored to embody the brand's themes of purity and clarity, aligning its structure with haiku-like brevity to suggest crystalline transparency without excess. Filmed at a Kyoto temple, the ad's ethereal visuals amplified this intent, positioning the music as an auditory emblem of refined simplicity.[6] Subtle comparisons can be drawn to Tangerine Dream's 1970s sequencer-driven instrumentals, whose pulsating, minimalist electronics influenced Bowie's Berlin Trilogy and lingered in later works like "Crystal Japan." The German group's ambient sequences, evoking vast emotional landscapes, resonate in the track's repetitive motifs and synthetic depth.[12]Release
Single formats
The "Crystal Japan" single was initially released exclusively in Japan in July 1980 as a 7-inch vinyl 45 RPM record by RCA Records, cataloged under SS-3270.[13] This standard commercial edition featured orange labels and was packaged in a plain RCA company paper sleeve accompanied by a unique picture insert depicting David Bowie, with lyrics printed on the reverse side.[14] The single's release tied into a promotional tie-in for the Crystal Jun Rock shochu advertising campaign, though the track itself was an original instrumental composition rather than a direct ad jingle.[6][1] Limited promotional editions of the 7-inch vinyl were also produced in 1980 for distribution to Japanese radio stations and DJs, identifiable by their white labels and unique stamped markings indicating promo status.[15] These white-label variants shared the same packaging as the commercial release but were not intended for public sale, serving instead to promote airplay.[16] No alternate mixes or remixes were included on the initial vinyl releases; the track appeared solely in its original single edit. The track listing for both the standard and promo vinyl editions is as follows:| Side | Track Title | Writers/Arrangers | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Crystal Japan | David Bowie | 3:26 |
| B | Alabama Song | Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill (arr. David Bowie) | 3:50 |

