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The Red Krayola in Tokyo

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Title card

The Red Krayola in Tokyo is a 1995 Japanese TV documentary about the Red Krayola.

Watch on YouTube

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
07:44 Thompson: I took piano lesson when I was eleven. When I was in the first band I was ever in, I was twelve with a guy when I was in boarding school. I don't know when this was, '58, '59? Then, went to college and got very interested in jazz. I learned an awful lot from jazz. But technically, it was just not the thing I was interested in; I was really more interested in composing new material. I did not want to interpret; more than anything I wanted to generate new material.
08:12 "14" live clip
10:35 Thompson: The Red Krayola is fun, partly, for me, because it hasn't — somehow I had the luck never to be so successful that I got trapped. It would get together and it was just that ephemeral that it would come apart. And then it would come together again with new people and different ideas and new blood. And, y'know, being an old vampire, I love new blood, y'know [chuckles]
10:58 "Worried Worried" live clip
15:28 miso / 味噌
15:31 Thompson: The acoustic sensations pretty much coincide; they seem fairly international to me. I'm such a nomad, y'know, I go every-bloody-where on Earth and it sounds quite like most cities I know. The unique things that you don't hear — you don't hear pachinko parlors everywhere, umm... you don't hear Japanese everywhere.
15:49 Reiko A. - "Untitled" live clip / Reiko A. interview in Japanese
17:08 Thompson: And I think that that was one of the main ideas behind pop music to begin with was that you didn't have to be bloody Beethoven, y'know, anybody can stand up and have a go and put something out.
17:20 Masaya Nakahara interview in Japanese / Violent Onsen Geisha - "Untitled" live clip
19:20 ? interview in Japanese / Tairikuotoko vs. Sanmyakuonna - "Planaria" live clip
20:27 Thompson:
20:45 ? interview in Japanese / Jun Kurosawa - "Sunshine of Your Love" live clip
21:20 Thompson: And I think that the transformations that are
21:39 "Free Form Freak-Out" live clip / Japanese voiceover
23:06 coming apart / 分解
23:10 "People Get Ready (The Train's Not Coming)" 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
1966, 1967, 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975
1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985
1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
Live recordings