The Red Krayola in Tokyo
Appearance

The Red Krayola in Tokyo is a 1995 Japanese TV documentary about the Red Krayola.
Background
The documentary was filmed during the Red Krayola's tour in Japan in October 1994. The band was supporting their first album on American indie label Drag City, The Red Krayola. The live performances were at Shimokitazawa Shelter on October 4[1][2] and P3 Art and Environment's symposium on music and art on October 7.
The documentary aired in 1995 on Japanese television
Contents
Time | Description |
---|---|
00:04 | October 1994, Tokyo |
00:10 | "Rapspierre" live clip 1 of 3 |
00:29 | imported / 輸入された |
00:33 | Thompson: And I think that a lot of the things that we saw beginning to develop in pop music and in popular culture in the sixties are now very widespread. We see, for example, a general fragmentation of the very idea of art. I mean, everything is wide open; you can do pretty much anything that you can get away with, in fact. The question is being able to justify things, of course. Of course we aspire to justified practice. |
00:57 | "Pride" live clip |
01:04 | Title card: 伝説のロック・バンド The Red Krayola (ザ・レッド・クラヨラ) in 東京 |
01:18 | Thompson (on phone): ...Doo-dah... Racetrack five miles long. Oh, the doo-dah day. Oh, to run all night! ..To run all day... |
01:37 | Thompson: I don't know if you know what it was like; in 1965, the Beatles were, y'know, like the top of the world and everything looked possible. Absolutely everything looked possible. It seemed even that you might be able to import into popular music some — what would you call them? — artistic ideas or some quasi-serious ideas. It didn't have to be about bubblegum and all that sort of stuff. And I took this seriously. I took bourgeois ideology seriously. |
02:04 | "Pride" clip / Japanese voiceover |
03:09 | Vending machine |
03:31 | "I Knew It" clip / Japanese voiceover / Thompson getting street footage |
04:47 | 下北沢シェルター (Shimokitazawa Shelter) |
04:53 | "Old Tom Clark" live clip / Japanese voiceover |
05:14 | Thompson: Now it's an interesting time because there's not a — for example, in '78 there was punk ideology, right, and this whole independent idea — which was, of course, a complete — everything was so contradictory all the time. On the one hand you had The Clash, or these people, y'know — people are talking about 'honesty to the kids in the street' who are signed to CBS. And the Pistols have signed three recording contracts with three of the biggest record companies in the world. The independent scene was always a stepping stone to the majors in those days. |
05:43 | "Dairymaid's Lament" live clip |
Credits
Role | Person |
---|---|
The Red Krayola | Mayo Thompson |
David Grubbs | |
Tom Watson | |
John McEntire | |
Director / Cameraman | Takeshi Kimi |
Cameraman | Yuji Kanazawa |
Hideyuki Tanaka | |
Sound Recordist | Eiji Mori |
Video Engineer | Manabu Sato |
Grip | Tomoko Itakura |
On-line Editor | Masahiro Watanabe |
Sound Engineer | Tomomi Yamauchi |
Production Assistant | Tomomi Fujiyama |
Seiichi Kaisaka | |
Asako Kai | |
Taro Shiokawa | |
Hisashi Kanke | |
Special Thanks to | Timothy Blum |
Klaas Glenewinkel | |
Shimokitazawa SHELTER | |
P3 art and environment | |
Tokyo Art Speak | |
Drag City Records | |
Producer | Toshihiko Kawaguchi |
Produced by | MASTERMIND Productions Inc. |
Documentary Japan Inc. |
References
The Red Krayola Shows | |||||||||
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Live recordings |