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Fricke’s Picks: Steve Jansen

2/12/08, 1:37 pm EST


The Invisible Man
In the Eighties British Zen-glam group Japan, drummer Steve Jansen (above, far left) was as important for what he chose not to play — he is practically vapor on marimba in the band’s plaintive classic “Ghosts” — as for his irregular heartbeats in “The Art of Parties” and “Still Life in Mobile Homes.” On his solo album, Slope (Samadhisound), Jansen is a constant presence on percussion, keyboards and samples — making slow-blooming, Asian-­flavored atmospheres that seem as fragile as rice paper — while giving the front line to singer-lyricists including Anja Garbarek (the daughter of saxophonist Jan Garbarek), Joan Wasser (a.k.a. Joan as Police Woman) and David ­Sylvian, the ex-­Japan singer and Jansen’s older brother. Sylvian’s showcase “Playground Martyrs” recalls the exotic whispers of the siblings’ old band, while “Ballad of a Deadman,” with Sylvian and Wasser in sinister duet, is a cowboy-ninja blues with acoustic guitars plucked like kotos and a strangely rousing hanging-party chorus. Jansen contributes a philharmonic’s worth of rhythm, riff and color to the song — and does it all like he’s just passing through in a cloud of dust.

[Photo: Costello/Redferns/Retna]


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Comments

Pedro | 3/18/2008, 10:25 pm EST

Just when I thought I was winning

Huh? | 2/19/2008, 12:55 pm EST

The band inspired Duran Duran back in the day. It is even rumoured that DD wanted David Sylvian to produce their first album, and even though he declined, that album stills reeks of Japan, visually and aurally.

Eddie Wilson | 2/13/2008, 7:35 am EST

Holy “Flock Of Duran Duran”!
Someone needs to tell these dudes it’s not 1983!

Even though I joke, the clothes were real sharp back in the day. I’m glad they’re doing it.

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