Sunday, April 5, 2020

The Spiders in the West: London & Hawaii

One of my biggest research interests when it comes to postwar Japanese popular music is how much exposure The Spiders (and Group Sounds in general) had to the west. I know that they toured Europe but where exactly did they go? How long were they there? Where did they perform? What songs? Who attended their shows? Did they appear on any television shows? I'd particularly like to know how the American and European public reacted to them. Was it similar to or influenced by Kyu Sakamoto's recent success with his #1 hit "Ue o Muite Arukō"/"Sukiyaki" in the United States in 1963?

I have heard rumors that The Spiders appeared on Ready, Steady, Go! (yes, the one that The Beatles appeared on) but I cannot find any evidence! While The Spiders seemed to very much enjoy their time in Europe, so much that Katsuo Ohno listed Paris as one of his favorite places, it seems that the feeling unfortunately was not mutual. I was fortunate enough to come across a short article that ran in the November 9, 1966 edition of the Daily Mirror recounting The Spiders' arrival at the London airport:




It reads: "Japan's Spiders Fly In: The Spiders, Japan's answer to the Beatles, flew into London Airport yesterday - and got a very un-Beatle-like reception. There were only three fans there to greet them. Still, the seven lads from Tokio, pictured above, weren't too worried. It is their first European tour, after all. And back home, their record "Sad Sunset" is topping the charts."

It really breaks my heart to know that The Spiders received such an "un-Beatle-like reception." But I wonder why. Kyu Sakamoto was received by a crowd of 2,000 at LAX just three years earlier when he visited the United States (but he did have a #1 hit at the time). I wonder why the case wasn't the same for The Spiders?

Hawaii's reception to The Spiders did not seem to be overly exuberant either. 

The Spiders' performance at the Honolulu International Center on June 24, 1967 was advertised in the June 19, 1967 edition of the Honolulu Star - Bulletin. It is very interesting (and cool!) to see that The Spiders were introduced to the American public as an eleki band and not a Group Sounds band, and that their article appeared next to one for Dick Dale and His Del-Tones! Also very interesting to see eleki defined as both "electric or energetic" and that The Spiders were considered both. The Star also seemed to take this opportunity to advertise the Sharps and Flats' performance at the Waikiki Shell in July (who are very much a jazz ensemble and not a rock group) and to advertise the latest kaiju movie that would be coming out, Gappa. However, this article failed miserably in one place: The Spiders' names.



Jun Inoue's last name is misspelled as "Inouye;" Mitsuru Kato's first name is literally made up as "Makoto" (yikes 😬); and Takayuki Inoue is given Katsuo's last name (Ono/Ohno). Not the best fact checking, I suppose? It is interesting to see that many Japanese artists played in Hawaii, as rockabilly star Masaaki Hirao played a show in Hawaii in 1959.



Unfortunately, this is where my new evidence ends for the time being. While I have an image of Katsuo at Disneyland and have seen another of Mitsuru and Katsuo at Knott's Berry Farm, I have yet to hear of anything solid designating they actually performed in the continental United States. I have heard that they performed on Where the Action Is, but I do not have any material proof. I think my next line of attack may be Japanese-American newspapers from the time.

Katsuo Ohno in Disneyland, approximately 1967




No comments:

Post a Comment