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David Sylvian (born David Alan Batt, February 23, 1958) is a British singer/songwriter
who first rose to fame as the lead vocalist of the band Japan, and whose
subsequent solo career has been influenced by a variety of musical styles,
including jazz and electronic music (primarily ambient and electronica).
Following the 1982 dissolution of Japan, the group's onetime frontman David
Sylvian staked out a far-ranging and esoteric career that encompassed not
only solo projects but also a series of fascinating collaborative efforts
and forays into filmmaking, photography, and modern art.
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Born David Batt in Kent, England, on February 23, 1958, Sylvian formed Japan
in 1974 and served as primary singer/songwriter throughout the group's eight-year
existence. Just prior to Japan's breakup, Sylvian began working with
composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, with whom he released the single "Bamboo Houses"
in 1982, marking the beginning of a longstanding musical relationship. After
1983's "Forbidden Colours," another joint effort with Sakamoto composed for
the film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, Sylvian released his 1984 solo
debut, Brilliant Trees. The first step in his music's evolution from Japan's
post-glam synth pop into richly textured, poetic ambience, the album
featured contributions from Sakamoto as well as Jon Hassell and Can alumnus
Holger Czukay. That year, Sylvian also published his first book of
photographs, -Perspectives: Polaroids 82/84; in 1985, he released
Preparations for the Journey, a documentary filmed in and around Tokyo, as
well as the EP Words With the Shaman. Gone to Earth, an ambitious double LP
recorded with assistance from Robert Fripp and Bill Nelson, followed in
1986, while 1987 marked the release not only of the beautiful Secrets of the
Beehive album but also the book collection -Trophies: The Lyrics of David
Sylvian. At the same time, he began composing the score for modern dancer
Gaby Abis' +Kin, which premiered at London's Almeida Theater that September;
another collaboration with Abis, +Don't Trash My Altar, Don't Alter My Trash,
bowed in November 1988. Also in 1988, Sylvian reunited with Holger Czukay
for the instrumental LP Plight and Premonition; the duo re-teamed in 1989
for Flux + Mutability. Ember Glance: The Permanence of Memory, an
installation of sculpture, sound, and light created by Sylvian and Russell
Mills, was staged in Tokyo Bay, Shinagawa, in 1990; a year later, he and the
other members of Japan, who had briefly reunited under the name Rain Tree
Crow, issued a self-titled album. In 1994, Sylvian emerged in tandem with
Robert Fripp for both an album, The First Day, and Redemption, another sound-and-image
installation exhibited in Japan. The superb Dead Bees on a Cake followed in
1999; Approaching Silence, a collection of instrumental material, appeared
later that fall. In fall 2000 Sylvian returned with the double-disc
Everything and Nothing, which made for an excellent introduction to some of
Sylvian's projects that had finally taken shape after composition completion,
financial settlements, and time constraints throughout his solo career. He
reappeared in 2003 with Blemish, an unsettling disc of new material
featuring appearances by avant guitar legend Derek Bailey and electronica
experimentalist Christian Fennesz. |
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DAVID SYLVIAN PICTURES |
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