Jacks (1960s Japanese band)
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The Jacks were a 1960s Japanese psychedelic rock group who released their most well known studio album Vacant World (or 'No Sekai' in Japanese) in 1968. The Jacks, originally known as Nightingale, began their career in 1966 as a folk trio. After jazz drummer Takasuke Kida joined the group they headed into a new musical direction. Though internationally obscure, the group was successful in Japan. Vacant World, which yielded the hit single 'Marianne', is widely seen as one of the most important Japanese rock albums of the era. The song 'Vacant World' (or 'Karappo no Sekai' in Japanese) was famously banned from Japanese airwaves due to lyrical content. The Jacks' musical legacy has carried on in Japan despite the fact that their career was quite short, disbanding shortly after the release of their second studio album Super Session (or 'No Kiseki' in Japanese).
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[edit] Discography
- Vacant World [No Sekai] (Toshiba Express, 1968)
- Super Session [No Kiseki](Toshiba, 1968)
- 'Karappo No Sekai' b/w 'Iikodane' (0000)
- Live '68 (Jasdac, 1973)
- Echoes In The Radio (Compilation) (Toshiba, 1986)
- Jacks' Greatest Hits (Toshiba Express)
Vacant World and Super Session are in print by Toshiba/EMI Japan.
[edit] Musical Style
The Jacks played in a distinct musical style fused with ambient psychedelic, surf, folk and jazz. The group had a dark, introspective sound with an exploratory, improvisational edge and sometimes headed into moody instrumental excursions. The Jacks typically employed reverb, tremolo and subtle fuzz-guitar and also utilized the vibraphone, organ and wind instruments such as the flute. Lead singer Yoshio Hayakawa sung in Japanese and typically ranged from a low, calm and tranquil voice to throaty, desperate sounding wails. Similarly, drummer Takasuke Kida would follow suit, going from subtle jazzy sounding fills to complicated, offbeat rhythms and manic cymbal crashes.
[edit] Members
- Yoshio Hayakawa – vocals, rhythm guitar
- Haruo Mizuhashi – lead guitar, vocals
- Hitoshi Tanino – Fender bass, upright bass
- Takasuke Kida – drums, flute, vibraphone
After the break up of the Jacks, singer Yoshio Hayakawa released one acclaimed solo album before retiring from music, only to reemerge again as a solo artist during the 1990s. Drummer Takasuke Kida died in a car accident in 1980.
[edit] Jacks' name
It is apparent that the Jacks did not use 'the' to denote their group's name, however they are most commonly referred to by English speakers as 'The Jacks'. An unrelated 1940s to 1950s American musical group The Cadets (doo wop) sometimes used the pseudonym 'The Jacks' to release certain songs on their subsidiary label. Though the two respective groups were musically dissimilar, the similarity of their names, matched with their paralleled level of obscurity has lent to a considerable amount of confusion between the two, particularly in the United States.
[edit] References
- http://www.japrocksampler.com/artists/japrock/jacks/
- http://www.keikaku.net/reviews/126
- http://www.garagehangover.com/?q=taxonomy/term/92/9
- http://www.hmv.co.jp/news/newsDetail.asp?newsnum=308260016