Sometime in the late 1990s, Japanese composer Ryuichi Sakamoto
was stuck in a Tokyo traffic jam. A melody had popped into his head
while he was driving; during the standstill, he called home and sang it
into his answering machine, he remembers. At the time, Japan was still
in the grips of “The Lost Decade,” a period of economic downturn following the inflated tech optimism and conspicuous consumption of the 1980s. Y2K anxiety
was gathering momentum. Amid the stress of busy city streets, the
melody harbored a yearning for the reflective pleasures and
possibilities of meandering. The little tune eventually grew into
“Opus,” the opening track of Sakamoto’s mid-career solo piano album, BTTB.
BTTB, an acronym for “Back to the Basics,” has generally been remembered as homage: Sakamoto doing Satie,
painting impressionistic scenes to speak to the subconscious. Memory,
however, has a tendency to behave like water—one minute flooding the
senses, the next smoothing away details. In BTTB’s case, the
weirder, more prescient, and occasionally humorous moments have been
washed from the public record. To be fair, the album’s form was fluid
from the start. First released in Japan in November 1998 with 14 tracks,
it was reissued just four months later with the addition of the somber
“Snake Eyes” and a four-handed piano version of the 1979 song “Tong Poo,” from Sakamoto’s hugely influential Yellow Magic Orchestra. Subsequent European and U.S. versions did away with some experimental tracks to make room for more commercial offerings.
This new 20th-anniversary edition feels like Sakamoto’s director’s
cut. With 18 tracks, it combines the 1999 Japanese release with two cuts
from the 2000 stateside version: the ad-soundtrack-turned-hit-single
“Energy Flow” and a beautifully looping closer called “Reversing.”
thank you, looks very interesting. -a.v.
ResponderEliminar