Yellow Dancer
Yellow Dancer is the fourth studio album by Japanese singer-songwriter and musician Gen Hoshino, released by Speedstar Records on December 2, 2015.
Development
Background
Japanese singer-songwriter and musician Gen Hoshino emerged as a primarily acoustic pop artist with his debut albums Baka no Uta and Episode. Hoshino's parents were both fans of jazz: his father and his mother would together "play modern jazz and R&B every day around the house". With his instrumental band Sakerock formed in 2000, Hoshino performed songs inspired by funk, soul, jazz, and R&B, and experimented with a mixture of Japanese and African-American styles on the B-sides to his singles, such as "Yuge" on "Kudaranai no Naka ni", "Moshi mo" on "Film", or "Kisetsu" on "Shiranai".Whilst in the process of wrapping up recording for his third album, Hoshino collapsed to a subarachnoid hemorrhage in December 2012. After a three-month hiatus, Stranger was released, which brought his sound into a more up-beat direction through greater use of synthesizer and string sections. Only a week later, he followed Stranger with the non-album rock and roll single "Gag" for the anime film Saint Young Men, but assumed a second hiatus in June after a reinspection discovered a relapse in his hemorrhage. While awaiting the reinspection, Hoshino wrote the lyrics to "Why Don't You Play in Hell? – the theme song to the Sion Sono film of the same name – and had it released on October 2, 2013, whilst still on hiatus. Hoshino used the song to reconsider his musical roots and was his first time incorporating African-American influences on an A-side.
At the start of 2014, Hoshino's recovery was officially commemorated by the conclusion of touring for Stranger in February and the Fukkatsu Live Tour in April. His first post-recovery single – a double A-side of "Crazy Crazy" and the J-Wave campaign song "Sakura no Mori" – was released on June 11, 2014. "Crazy Crazy" was written as a homage to the Japanese jazz band Crazy Cats and had been reworked from a somber melody created by Hoshino during his surgery's waiting process. A love for soul artists such as Michael Jackson re-discovered during the single's production primarily inspired "Sakura no Mori", which showcased Hoshino merging Japanese and African-American styles into his musical direction.
Conception
A fun production on "Sakura no Mori" inspired Hoshino to write an album in the same style, and conceived Yellow Dancer after noticing similarities in the stylistic origins from African-American music in the song and "Why Don't You Play in Hell?". Though the writing process of the singles focused on what Hoshino found fun and his niche musical interests, he was encouraged to explore the styles more openly on an album after noticing a rise in popularity of Western artists such as Chic, Daft Punk, and Bruno Mars in Japan; daily airplay of Mark Ronson and Mars' "Uptown Funk" at his local Lawson convenience store and the response to "Sakura no Mori" from J-Wave listeners further motivated his work on the album.One of the major obstacles in the album's production was Hoshino's discomfort replicating black music due to his Japanese nationality. In an interview with Musica magazine, Hoshino spoke of his disinterest in mimicking African-American music: "There was a hole in the middle of the obstacle , and I could've easily passed through. But the end of that path would just be a black music-like thing... that wouldn't be interesting to make." Instead of replicating black music, he would incorporate elements of it into a J-pop style, a method previously used by 1980s artists such as Toshinobu Kubota and Dreams Come True, who were both cited by Hoshino. In a press comment included with the album's announcement, he described the result of his "respect for black music" such as soul, jazz, R&B, and jump blues, paired with "focus on the emotions of Japanese pop", as his own genre called yellow music. In the same comment, he stated Yellow Dancer was written "having fun doing what I wanted" and shared his belief that the album would make listeners dance with "not only the body, but also with the heart".
Writing and production
Material specifically for the new album was written by Hoshino throughout 2015. The first song written with the concept of yellow music was the drama series theme song "Sun", which was released as the album's third single on May 27, 2015. It helped Hoshino envision what kind of album Yellow Dancer would be, and was in the middle of songs created; half of the others songs on the album were written before it, and the other half after. All tracks were written and produced by Hoshino solo; he also handled principal arrangement, whereas violinist Mio Okamura and Ego-Wrappin' support saxophonist Satoru Takeshima are credited for the arrangement of strings and horns, respectively. Lyrically, in contrast to his earliest work, Hoshino said he grew to enjoy writing about the specific emotions of "someone", scenery, and situations, rather than focusing on himself or a story. When questioning what he wanted to express against the black music-inspired sound, he decided to focus on what he described as "Japanese scenery", such as the four seasons, morning and night, or ocean and mountains.Yellow Dancer was recorded and mixed by Shojiro Watanabe, and mastered by Takahiro Uchida. Production was intersected with Hoshino's acting work, which he said particularly provided difficulty in recording vocals. Since Hoshino's schedule was largely dictated by dates of shootings decided around three days in advance, he would plan around this to book studios and schedule with the engineers. The acting work would also influence parts of the album's writing; Hoshino believes his role as an obstetrician on Dr. Storks unconsciously inspired the lyrics of the album opener "Tokiyo", which uses the word aka-chan. Recording was still in progress during Hoshino's interview with Musica on October 1, 2015, and one unspecified song was still without final lyrics; however, alongside the album's announcement on October 14, Hoshino stated that Yellow Dancer had been completed.
Composition
Overview
Yellow Dancer includes 14 tracks and has a total length of 56 minutes and 27 seconds. Its sound is primarily a mix of Japanese pop and folk with African-American genres like jazz, soul, and R&B, though critics also described it as containing tracks with hints of dance, disco, funk, electro, post-rock, exotica, and Latin. Bounce Daisuke Sawada wrote that Hoshino "worked head-on on soul music, old-time jazz, and R&B", whilst he maintained a "folky poetic sentiment". Skream! magazine's Tomoko Ishisumi thought that the album composed "black grooves" into Hoshino's musical style, but also noticed that certain tracks follow unique styles. The opening numbers "Tokiyo" and "Week End" are upbeat or poppy tracks, whereas "Miss You", the acoustic "Kuchizuke", and "Yoru" are ballads. The album's lyrical tone is positive.Songs
Yellow Dancer opening song, "Tokiyo", showcases little influence from African-American influences, but instead features elements that were described as Japanese or oriental. A pop song centered on synthesizer, it has a prevalent string section by Okamura, and lyrics about the indiscriminate passage of time. Cinra Takanori Kuroda compared the song to the work of the electronic music band Yellow Magic Orchestra. The morning show theme song "Week End", a pop and R&B-infused dance song where Hoshino encourages listeners to dance freely, was compared by CDJournal reviewers to Earth, Wind & Fire's "September". "Sun" was strongly influenced by Michael Jackson and includes the line "Hey J" as a nod to the singer; a critic for Real Sound compared it to the dance music of Quincy Jones and Jackson's album Off the Wall, whereas Kuroda thought it was particularly reminiscent to the song "Rock with You" from the same album.Hoshino sings of parting with someone important and new beginnings on "Miss You", a slow-to-medium-paced soul ballad that Mikiki Chikako Kato thought was close to Baka no Uta. The sixteen-bar and syncopated fifth track "Soul" is named after the genre of the same name and features a Hammond organ, a flute solo, and soul-styled vocal performance. Tomoyuki Mori, writing for Real Sound, thought that "Miss You" and "Soul" showcased similarities to the American artists Curtis Mayfield and Alabama Shakes, respectively, whilst their lyricism represents Japanese writing or possibly haiku, which he described as one of Hoshino's inventions on the album. "Kuchizuke" is an acoustic ballad consisting only of guitar and vocals, where the lyrics discuss life with a partner. Following the calm "Kuchizuke", Kuroda wrote that the album is brought into "chaos" by "Why Don't You Play in Hell?", a New Orleans-styled track led by a sporadic beat and horns. "Nerd Strut", an instrumental number with the subtitle "", features a bass performance from Yellow Magic Orchestra's Haruomi Hosono, with Hoshino in charge of the rest of the instrumentation. Musically an exotica-styled composition, "Nerd Strut" features hints of calypso and salsa music similarly to Hosono's albums Tropical Dandy, Bon Voyage co., and Paraiso.
The double A-side singles "Sakura no Mori" and "Crazy Crazy" are placed next to each other on the track listing. The former, a dance and disco track with reminiscence to acid jazz, features guest background vocals from Orarī, Shōhei Takagi, and Yū Arauchi, members of the bands Kata Omoi and Cero. Its lyrics are a double entendre that can be interpreted as either about excitement at the beginning of spring or an intimate encounter between a man and a woman; Saori Yoshiba at Skream! compared the writing on the song to the work of novelist Ango Sakaguchi. A tribute to the jazz music of Crazy Cats, Hoshino and his musicians tried to replicate "what a grandpa would play at a bar in New Orleans" in "Crazy Crazy", which opens with a piano solo themed to slapstick comedy and silent movies. "Snow Men"—the theme song to a promotional short film by cosmetic company Shiseido—was described as erotic by critics; Hoshino called it a "song of sex".