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Apryl Fool

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apryl Fool
OriginTokyo, Japan
Genres
Years active1969
LabelsMusicolor Records / Nippon Columbia
Past membersChu Kosaka
Eiji Kikuchi
Hiro Yanagida
Haruomi Hosono
Rei Matsumoto

Apryl Fool (エイプリル・フール) were a Japanese rock band formed in 1969. They released one album in September 1969 and disbanded a month later. Two members of Apryl Fool went on to form folk rock band Happy End.

Outline

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The predecessor of Apryl Fool were Floral, a band created by the Japanese Monkees Fan Club in February 1968.[1] Floral debuted on Nippon Columbia in August 1968 during the Group Sounds craze.[2] Floral split due to artistic differences and Apryl Fool was formed on April 1, 1969, with a new bassist (Haruomi Hosono) and a new drummer (Rei Matsumoto).[1] The name Apryl Fool was derived from the date of the band's formation and from the idea that "with this name, we can do things quite freely without being elaborated upon or irresponsibly".[2]

Around the time of the change of members, core member Hiroyoshi Yanagida became interested in organ rock groups like Iron Butterfly, Vanilla Fudge, and The Doors, which were representative of art rock/psychedelic rock in the US and UK.[citation needed] Unlike the blues rock (guitar-oriented) that was popular in Japan in 1969 (The Golden Cups, Blues Creation, The Mops, etc.), Apryl Fool's sound was considered radical at the time.[3] They were one of the pioneering bands in the Japanese "new rock" movement, which advocated Anglo-American rock.[citation needed]

The Apryl Fool released their debut, and only, album The Apryl Fool on September 27, 1969.[3][1] In a retrospective review Sean Westergaard of AllMusic described the album as "a great mixture of hard psych and blues-rock".[4] The album includes a cover of the song "Pledging My Time" by Bob Dylan.[4] Only two of the tracks are sung in Japanese ("Suite: Mother Earth" and "Dark Sunday"), as the band believed that "only English could be used to understand the reaction in other countries."[5] Pitchfork described the Japanese tracks on Apryl Fool as "suffused with lysergic vibrations."[6]

Apryl Fool played their final show in Ginza on October 26, 1969, and broke up.[1] The next day, Hosono and Matsumoto formed Happy End under the name Blue Valentine.[1] In March 2019 Hosono released Hochono House, a remade version of his debut solo album, to coincide with the 50th anniversary of his first release with Apryl Fool.[7]

Members

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Discography

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Studio Albums

  • Apryl Fool (September 27, 1969) – Columbia LP: YS-10068-J

Extended Plays

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e 佐藤 剛 (2024-04-28), "GSの「ザ・フローラル」に参加した後に「エイプリル・フール」解散を経て「はっぴいえんど」へ至る道" [The road leading to 'Happy End' after joining GS's 'The Floral' and the break-up of 'Apryl Fool'], Tap the Pop (in Japanese), retrieved 2024-09-21
  2. ^ a b "今月のニューミュージック" [New Music of the Month], Music Magazine [d; ja] (in Japanese), Music Magazine Inc., p. 8, September 1969
  3. ^ a b "Lyricist Takashi Matsumoto on Happy End, writing for pop and helping change the course of Japanese music history". The Japan Times. 2022-05-22. Archived from the original on 2022-05-28. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
  4. ^ a b Sean Westergaard. The Apryl Fool Review at AllMusic. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
  5. ^ "ニューグループ エイプリル・フール" [New Group The Apryl Fool], Music Life [d; ja] (in Japanese), Shinko Music Entertainment [d; ja], pp. 162–163, September 1969
  6. ^ Tal Rosenberg (2022-03-20), "Happy End – Kazemachi Roman (review)", Pitchfork, retrieved 2024-09-21
  7. ^ Ian F. Martin (Jun–Aug 2019), "Sightseeing Music – On the unparalleled innovation of Haruomi Hosono, whose new release, Hochono House, marks the 50th anniversary of his first record", Frieze, no. 204, pp. 21–22, ISSN 0962-0672
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