Turning Japanese

1980 single by the Vapors From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Turning Japanese

"Turning Japanese" is a song by English band the Vapors, from their 1980 album New Clear Days. It was an international hit, becoming the band's most well-known song. The song prominently features the Oriental riff played on guitar.

Quick Facts Single by the Vapors, from the album New Clear Days ...
"Turning Japanese"
Thumb
Standard European picture sleeve
Single by the Vapors
from the album New Clear Days
B-side"Talk Talk" (USA/Canada)
"Here Comes the Judge" (live) (international)
ReleasedJanuary 1980
Genre
Length
  • 3:40 (Album version)
  • 3:19 (7" edit)
LabelUnited Artists Records
Songwriter(s)David Fenton
Producer(s)Vic Coppersmith-Heaven
The Vapors singles chronology
"Prisoners"
(1979)
"Turning Japanese"
(1980)
"News at Ten"
(1980)
Audio sample
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Composition and recording

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Perspective

According to songwriter David Fenton, "Turning Japanese is all the clichés about angst and youth and turning into something you didn't expect."[3] Fenton intended the song to be a love song, with the character of the song "pining over a photograph of his ex-girlfriend" in his bedroom, drawing from Fenton's own experience of being rejected. Fenton wrote the song in his flat, but had problems writing the chorus. He said that the chorus then came to him suddenly when he woke up at 4 a.m. with the lyric "Turning Japanese, I think I'm turning Japanese" in his head, and he used it even though the words and the song title did not "really mean much".[4]

The song was produced by Vic Coppersmith-Heaven, who had previously rejected a request to produce for the band after listening to demos sent to him by the band's managers John Weller (father of Paul Weller) and Bruce Foxton. The band's unsuccessful first single "Prisoners" was therefore produced by someone else. Coppersmith-Heaven later had another listen to the demos and agreed to produce "Turning Japanese" for them. He proposed several changes to the arrangement of the song, which were done. He recorded the Vapors live to capture the energy of the band, before stripping it down to just the drums, and then overdubbed the song. According to Fenton, the drummer did not like the song, and "just went 'Boom! Splat!'" in the recording, but the band thought it sounded good and kept it.[4]

The band suspected they would score a hit with "Turning Japanese", even delaying its release in order to make it their second single, hoping to avoid becoming "one-hit wonders". Nonetheless, they never matched the single's success.[5] In Australia, it spent two weeks at No. 1 during June 1980.[6] The song was also a minor hit in Japan.[3]

The music video was directed by Russell Mulcahy.[7]

Reception

The music video was among the first 200 played on MTV. It received heavy rotation, giving the song more exposure than mere radio airplay.[8]

Covers

The American ska punk band, Skankin' Pickle, covered the song on their 1994 album Sing Along With Skankin' Pickle.[citation needed]

A cover of the song was also featured on America singer-songwriter Liz Phair's 1995 EP Juvenilia.[citation needed]

The song was featured on the soundtrack of the 1997 movie Beverly Hills Ninja covered by the band The Hazies.[9]

Kirsten Dunst recorded a cover, with an accompanying video filmed and directed by McG and produced by Takashi Murakami in Tokyo in August 2009.[10]

On the Canadian sketch comedy series Second City Television, Rick Moranis performed a lounge-style version of the song as the character Tom Monroe.[11]

Charts

More information Chart (1980–1981), Peak position ...
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Certifications and sales

More information Region, Certification ...
Region CertificationCertified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[24] Platinum 100,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[25] Silver 250,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

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See also

References

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