David Sylvian (from February 23, 1958, Stone Park, Beckenham, Kent <ed.>) began his career as the lyricist, composer and vocalist with Japan, one of the most original and initially underrated British bands of the late '70's' and early '80's. Although for a number of years Japan attracted a devoted cult following, it was not until 1982 that they achieved widespread success with the seminal album Tin Drum Taken from that record, the poignant and reflective "Ghosts" gave them their biggest chart hit, reaching number three in the UK singles chart.
"Writing Ghosts was a turning point for me," Sylvian recalls, "So much of what we created in Japan was built upon artifice. With that song I'd felt I'd had a breakthrough, that I'd touched upon something true to myself and expressed it in a way that didn't leave me feeling overly vulnerable." The decision to go solo was made shortly afterwards, "because I knew that I had to find my own voice, and because I also wanted to strike up different relationships with other musicians."
Early in 1983, the Japanese composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, who had contributed to one of the band's earlier albums, asked Sylvian to write and perform a vocal version of the theme from his award winning score for the film Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence. The result, "Forbidden Colours" was Sylvian's first international chart success. "I was very impressed with Ryuichi's broad musical knowledge, and his ability to put that into practice, particularly in the orchestral arrangements, which at the time I'd had little experience with." Sakamoto has been a source of help and inspiration ever since.
In August 1983 Sylvian was ready to record his first solo album, Brilliant Trees, at Hansa Studios in Berlin. The cast of collaborators included Sakamoto, Holger Czukay idiosyncratic bassist with the German avant-garde rock band Can - as well as two pioneering trumpet players from the experimental fringes of the jazz world, Jon Hassell and Kenny Wheeler. An element of continuity was provided by two of Sylvian's former Japan colleagues, drummer Steve Jansen and keyboard player Richard Barbieri. The poetic strength of Sylvian's lyrics and vocals was matched on these recordings by innovative arrangements which at one point featured Czukay on an IBM Dictaphone. Released in June 1984, Brilliant Trees went straight into the UK chart at number four.
Before embarking on his next solo album, Sylvian revisited his interest in the visual arts, first with a limited edition book of Polaroid collages titled Perspectives, then in a documentary video loosely based on an exhibition of the photographs which took place in Tokyo.
The soundtrack for this video, Preparation for a Journey, featured performances by Ryuichi Sakamoto, Masami Tsuchiya and Steve Jansen, along with traditional pieces by the now popular Bulgarian Women's Choir. Back in London Sylvian reworked part of the soundtrack with Hoger Czukay, Robert Fripp and Kenny Wheeler under the new title Steel Cathedrals. This was released at the end of 1985 as part of an EP which also included a new instrumental piece, recorded with Jon Hassell, "Words With The Shaman." "After Brilliant Trees I really wanted to further explore the relationship with Jon Hassell and Holger Czukay, developing themes which surfaced during the recording of the album" Sylvian explains, "as everything I do tends to contain the seeds for the next project." During the flurry of recording activity which took up most of 1985, Sylvian was carefully seeding his second solo album with the help of a couple of new collaborators.
For Gone To Earth he got in touch with guitarists Robert Fripp and Bill Nelson, both of whom had played key roles in defining progressive rock. Gone to Earth, a double album containing seven vocal tracks and ten instrumental pieces, attracted the same critical acclaim as Brilliant Trees when it was released in September 1985. The next 18 months proved to be a prolific period in terms of songwriting, and David Sylvian soon found himself with a new collection of material.
This time he arranged the songs mainly for acoustic instruments with strings, woodwind, and brass. His long time ally Ryuichi Sakamoto worked closely with him on the recordings which were produced at Studio Miraval in the South of France by Steve Nye. As usual Sylvian had put together a crack team of players including Danny Thompson on double bass, Phil Palmer on acoustic guitar, Danny Cummings on percussion, Mark Isham on trumpet and flugelhorn, David Torn on electric guitars, and Steve Jansen on drums and percussion. For all the restrained virtuosity of the band, the resulting album, Secrets Of The Beehive, (released in October 1987) highlighted the lyrical content of songs which, while intensely personal, were his most appealing to date.
This was to be the last David Sylvian solo album for 10 years. "After Secrets, music took a bit of a back seat in my life," Sylvian reveals. "I was deeply troubled. There was a whole private search going on." For the next few years he confined himself to joint projects. He worked intermittently with Holger Czukay at the latter's studio in Cologne recording improvised performances with Jaki Liebezeit and Micheal Karoli (both ex-Can) and Markus Stockhausen, son of the famous modern composer. The recordings with Czukay surfaced on the Venture record label as Plight and Premonition (March 1988) and Flux and Mutability (September 1989) A 1988 solo concert tour, In Praise of Shamans, took in 80 cities around the world, with Sylvian fronting a seven piece band.
1989 saw the release of a five CD boxed set Weatherbox (designed by the artist Russell Mills) containing the majority of his solo work. To accompany this release Sylvian put out a single, ironically titled "Pop Song", which featured the use of microtones and the piano improvisations of John Taylor.
In the spring of 1989 Sylvian decided to call together the former members of the group Japan. "This was something I really wanted to do. The kind of thing I'd been doing of late, particularly with Holger, had opened my eyes to the potential of group composition via improvisation." When Sylvian proposed this idea though he insisted on a change of name to Rain Tree Crow - having drawn a clear line between the work he produced with Japan and the musical direction of his subsequent projects.
The album got underway in September 1989 at Studio Miraval, France. Guest musicians included Michael Brook and Bill Nelson. The recording was completed in April 1990 but, for financial reasons, the mixing of the work by Sylvian and Steve Nye was not undertaken until December of that year. The album was finally released in April 1991. "Despite the difficulties we had making it, I'm still very proud of Rain Tree Crow," Sylvian says. In December 1991, after having heard an advance tape of Sakamoto's Heartbeat album Sylvian decided to adapt one of the pieces "Tainai Kaiki". Contributing melody and lyrics he invited the guitarist Bill Frisell and vocalist/poet Ingrid Chavez, then signed to Prince's Paisley Park label, to join Sakamoto and himself for the New York recording sessions. In February 1992 just two and a half months after meeting, Sylvian and Chavez were married in Minneapolis where they lived for the next 4 years. Shortly after his marriage, Sylvian struck up a fruitful musical partnership with Robert Fripp. Tours of Japan and Italy, with the Chapman stick player Trey Gunn, were followed by a studio album, The First Day, which appeared in July 1993. A second tour, this time as a 5 piece band, spawned a live album, Damage, in Autumn 1994. "What I got out of the relationship with Robert was the pleasure of performing live, which had eluded me up to that point. The energy Robert puts out on stage is quite palpable, and, I found, very inspiring."
An indirect result of this collaboration was a short solo tour on which Sylvian performed alone on stage accompanying himself on either acoustic guitar or keyboards. The experience was a milestone for Sylvian in as far as it strengthened his belief in himself. "That tour," Sylvian admits, "was a massive hurdle to overcome for me."
Work on his new solo album began after this tour and took just over four years to complete, a process which Sylvian found "a bit frustrating, although I always knew that the material was strong." Writing and recording were carried out in bursts, between which he simply got on with his new life in Minneapolis and, more recently, California. "A lot of the material for this album grew out of writing sessions for Ingrid. The big challenge for me as a songwriter is to draw something essential out of myself."
Sylvian's meticulous approach eventually paid dividends with the album which he named (after Secrets Of The Beehive) Dead Bees On A Cake. The tapes started rolling in Ryuichi Sakamoto's studio in New York City, moved to Peter Gabriel's Real World complex near Bath and ended up at Sylvian's own home studio in Sonoma. Many of the featured musicians were old friends, like Kenny Wheeler, Steve Jansen and Bill Frisell. Despite the long gap between the release of Bees in Spring 1999 and Sylvian's previous solo outing in 1988, the album was generally acclaimed as his finest to date, and it spawned a UK top 40 single in the languorous ballad, I Surrender.
While the world was eagerly digesting Dead Bees On A Cake, Sylvian was busy working on an album based around a piece he had originally devised for a Japanese installation. Darkly ambient in tone and gorgeously rich in sound textures, Approaching Silence appeared in the Autumn of 1999, a perfect pre-Millennial summary of Sylvian's ambitions as a composer of meditative instrumental music.
And now a year later here comes another, far more substantial collection of old material which -let's be quite clear about this- is emphatically NOT Sylvian's Greatest Hits, his back catalogue re-visited, his past re-packaged etc. Many of the 29 tracks on the Everything And Nothing double CD have never been heard before on disc; several of the rest appear now in re-mixed versions.
"I couldn't consider compiling a 'best of' in the traditional sense" says Sylvian, "I've had minor hits with Red Guitar and Forbidden Colours but much of what appeared on singles didn't constitute my best work. The approach I decided to take was that of an overview. To bring to completion compositions which had been dropped from various projects due to contextual, budgetary and time restraints. And to return to works for a fresh crack at them for what I'm guessing will be the last time. Pieces that have lain in the vaults for years." Among many surprising inclusions on Everything And Nothing is a recently completed version of the legendary "lost" Japan tune Some Kind Of Fool, intended for Gentlemen Take Polaroids but not finished in time for its release, and Ride, a track recorded for the Secrets Of The Beehive album which likewise benefits from a recently added vocal and final mix.
"I never look over my shoulder at a prospective audience when working but this project was different. This was to be an overview for those who'd seen me falloff the face of popular music back in 1982. For those who have yet to hear a note from one of my (solo) recordings. The title makes light of the notion of the compilation itself and of course the fruits of a lifetime's efforts. 'You do the best you can and then you let go with no attachment to the outcome of your efforts.' Not an easy lesson but one I've become more comfortable with in recent years."