Beauty (Ryuichi Sakamoto album) explained

Beauty
Type:studio
Artist:Ryuichi Sakamoto
Cover:Beauty_By_Ryuichi_Sakamoto_1989.jpg
Released:November 21, 1989 (Japan)
Genre:Synthpop, experimental rock
Length:59:02 (Japanese release)
Label:Virgin
Producer:Ryuichi Sakamoto
Prev Title:The Last Emperor
Prev Year:1987
Next Title:The Sheltering Sky
Next Year:1990

Beauty is the eighth solo studio album by Japanese musician Ryuichi Sakamoto. Both a Japanese and an international version were released by Virgin Records in 1989 and 1990, respectively. The international release contains the track "You Do Me (Edit)" featuring singer Jill Jones, a song previously released as a single.

Overview

Beauty is notable for its "collage of styles" that range from rock, techno, and classical to flamenco, African, and Japanese traditional.[1] In discussing whether music is narrative and illustrative or an abstract medium, Sakamoto said, "I have visions sometimes when I'm writing contemporary music, even when it's very logical. For example, for one of my songs on the album Beauty, I was always having visions of Amazonian rainforests, a little plane flying very low over the trees. Trees, trees, trees, and some birds. But the title of the song is 'Calling from Tokyo'."[2]

Recorded at various sound studios throughout Tokyo, New York, and Los Angeles, Beauty features many collaborators that include Arto Lindsay, Brian Wilson, Robbie Robertson, and Sly Dunbar.[3] On his time working with Wilson, Sakamoto said, "I had asked Brian Wilson to sing on the album so I went to Los Angeles and we recorded with him. I had been informed that he had had a difficult time, some kind of mental illness, and I could sense that, even though he wasn't that surprising in the studio. But then the following day, I flew from LA back to New York to continue recording and he showed up without telling me, with his whole family in tow. The schedule was already tightly planned, but I was so grateful he'd come, so we made some time to work with him. It was a beautiful moment – one I won't forget for the rest of my life."[4]

Personnel

Performers

Technical

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ryuichi Sakamoto: Classical & Pop Fusion. Sound on Sound. SOS Publications Group. January 31, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160131191308/http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/apr98/articles/sakamoto.html. January 31, 2016. April 1998.
  2. Web site: Johnston. Sheila. Knowing when to keep quiet: Ryuichi Sakamoto, writer, pop star, 'not very good' actor and composer of film scores - including the Oscar-winning The Last Emperor - talks to Sheila Johnston about music and the movies. The Independent. January 31, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160131191904/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/knowing-when-to-keep-quiet-ryuichi-sakamoto-writer-pop-star-not-very-good-actor-and-composer-of-film-1556323.html. January 31, 2016. October 8, 1992.
  3. Web site: Discography of Arto Lindsay. New York Downtown Scene. January 31, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160131194534/http://nyds-discographies.com/lindsay.htm. January 31, 2016.
  4. Web site: Berning. Dale. Fused: Alva Noto & Ryuichi Sakamoto Interviewed . . May 12, 2011 . August 31, 2016.
  5. Book: オリコンチャートブック〈LP編(昭和45年‐平成1年). 1990. Oricon Books. Minato, Tokyo. 4871310256.