Thursday, December 2, 2021

Onyanko Club -- KICK OFF

 

Almost a month ago, I wrote about a friend giving me some LPs that he no longer wanted and one of those records was Minako Honda's(本田美奈子)June 1986 2nd album "LIPS". Well, another gift was "KICK OFF", the debut album by the first aidoru supergroup that lyricist Yasushi Akimoto(秋元康)created back in the 1980s, Onyanko Club(おニャン子クラブ). Looks like along with the title, someone really wanted to put in that rugby theme for the album cover and liner notes.


Released in September 1985, just a few months after Onyanko Club's most famous song and debut single, "Sailor Fuku wo Nugasanaide" (セーラー服を脱がさないで)first got sold, "KICK OFF" not only has Single No. 1 in there, but also "Makka na Jitensha"(真赤な自転車)which I've also written about. And regarding "Sailor Fuku", I never mentioned who exactly was singing lead for that number, so I'll mention it here: Eri Nitta, Miharu Nakajima, Satomi Fukunaga and Kazuko Utsumi(新田恵利・中島美春・福永恵規・内海和子).


Kicking off the album (pun intended) is "Ijiwaru ne, Darlin'"(いじわるねDarlin'...You're Mean, Darlin') with Akimoto behind the lyrics (as he is for all of the tracks on "KICK OFF") and Kiyonori Matsuo(松尾清憲)on the melody here and one more song. Etsuko Yamakawa(山川恵津子)provided the arrangement and keyboard play for "Ijiwaru ne, Darlin'" and yep, it sounds like my image of the typical Onyanko Club song and a happy-go-lucky 60s bubblegum pop tune about all that adolescent lovey-dovey stuff. Along with Nakajima, Mika Nagoya, Ruriko Nagata, Aki Kihara, Harumi Tomikawa, Sanae Jounouchi, Mamiko Takai and Rika Tatsumi(中島美春・名越美香・永田ルリ子・樹原亜紀・富川春美・城之内早苗・高井麻巳子・立見里歌)were behind the mikes.


I thought that "Natsu no Christmas"(夏のクリスマス...Summer Christmas) was just another coy title really talking about enjoying the summer holiday. However, it looks like Akimoto wanted the narrative for this surprisingly groovy track to cover both summer and winter with the romance beginning on Christmas Eve and spanning into the hot season several months later. Ken Takahashi(高橋研)and Jun Sato(佐藤準)covered composition and arrangement respectively, the same duo behind "Makka na Jitensha". Nitta, Nakajima, Fukunaga, Utsumi, Nagoya and Takai were on deck here.


It's just Fukunaga and Utsumi for the first track on Side B of the original LP, "Ai no Ronri Shakai"(愛の論理社会...Moral Society of Love), and for me, it's the surprise of "KICK OFF". This isn't only because of Akimoto's hot lyrics about a potentially May-December romance starting from a hotel bar and graduating into the hotel suite (as sung by a couple of teenagers...but then again, didn't we have Momoe Yamaguchi the decade before?), but also because the arrangement and music by Yamakawa really take "Ai no Ronri Shakai" into the realm of evening City Pop. Plus, on guitar is none other than Makoto Matsushita(松下誠)! I think that I'll have that martini right now.


"Hayasugiru Sedai"(早すぎる世代...Too Early Generation) was composed and arranged by Jun Sato and it was the B-side to the "Sailor Fuku wo Nugasanaide" single. Fashioned as some teenage rebellion against the parents for trying to restrict the girls' wants to explore the world in all ways, again I hear some of that cute 60s and the adorably somewhat off-tune vocalization by the Club. The liner notes have the entire group singing but according to J-Wiki, the "front" vocals are provided by Nitta, Nakajima, Fukunaga and Utsumi.


One more tune that I'll throw in is "FEN wo Kikasete"(FENを聴かせて...Let Me Hear Some FEN) sung by Nitta and Nakajima with Matsuo on melody and Yamakawa on arrangement and keyboards. For those who may not know, FEN was known as the Far East Network, a group of American radio and television stations serving the US military in Japan and other areas in the Pacific Ocean (it's now known as American Forces Network Japan). It's indeed a nice-and-light aidoru tune but that intro had me first thinking of something more Taeko Ohnuki(大貫妙子)-friendly synthpop. Akimoto's lyrics weave a story of a romance taking place over a couple of nights at least, and I guess listening to FEN was considered to be a sign of becoming mature and worldly.

"KICK OFF" scored a No. 2 ranking on the Oricon weeklies and it ended up as the 41st-ranked album of 1985, pretty auspicious feat for this large aidoru group. I was pleasantly surprised since I had been expecting just the usual bubbly 80s aidoru fare but instead got a few curve balls as well among the tracks. It certainly sounds like Akimoto wanted to bring in a few different composers and arrangers into the mix. 


2 comments:

  1. This is one I don't have, although I might try to find a cheap copy before next Christmas in July. I do have their "Merry X'mas for You." It was the first picture disc I bought. Oddly, it only has one Christmas song on it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Scott. Hope you get your own copy of "Kick Off". As for "Merry X'mas for You", I found a video of it on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37iifh1W90o). I think that I'll give it a writeup later in the month. Thanks!

      Delete

Feel free to provide any comments (pro or con). Just be civil about it.