Potpourri (P-Model album) explained

Potpourri
Type:Studio
Artist:P-Model
Cover:Potpourri (P-Model album).jpg
Recorded:December 1980 – February 1981
Studio:Sunrise Studio (recording and mixing), Ikebukuro, Toshima
Warner-Pioneer Studio, Roppongi, Minato
Tokyo
Label:Warner-Pioneer
Producer:P-Model
Prev Title:Landsale
Prev Year:1980
Next Title:Perspective
Next Year:1982

Potpourri is the third album of Japanese band P-Model.

Overview

On the year of Landsales release, the synthpop boom was reaching critical mass. Bandleader Susumu Hirasawa, feeling the group was in a state of crisis, distanced P-Model from the genre, trying to drive trend followers through rebellious episodes, and replacing their colorful clothing and equipment for a muted getup (black, white, gray and blue). At one concert, a leaflet titled "The Point of Coming to a Concert" was distributed while Landsale was looped endlessly through the PA system; the band did not play until the concertgoers started an uproar which led to a backlash against the band.[1]

Bassist Katsuhiko Akiyama's creative position was in an opposite direction to where Hirasawa wanted to take P-Model, so he was fired from the band, and his songs were not played anymore. He was replaced by high school sophomore Tatsuya Kikuchi, a student of Hirasawa's at the Yamaha Synthesizer School. Kikuchi did not formally join the band while Potpourri was being recorded, leading Hirasawa and keyboardist Yasumi Tanaka to play bass parts on the album, each doing the songs they wrote.[2]

Potpourri has a harsher and more off-putting sound than previous albums, with P-Model employing different instruments and experimental recording techniques. Guitar is more prominent than the keyboard-centric albums from before, leaving synthesizers to go almost unused. Hirasawa incorporates greater antagonism into his vocals, sometimes to the point of screaming them.

The album alienated P-Model's fanbase, leaving only a core audience that would persist with Hirasawa throughout his career.

Track listing

"film" contains an interpolation of 1959 translation (originally performed and recorded by Ishii alongside the) of the traditional French children's song, believed to date no earlier than 1800.

In all releases of the album, the titles with Japanese characters listed are rendered only in them, except for the title track which is rendered as "potpourri (ポプリ)".

Personnel

P-Model – production, arrangements
Visual staff
Staff

Release history

DateLabel(s)FormatCatalogNotes
Warner-PioneerLPK-12005W
CSLKF-7025
Warner Music JapanCDWPCL-605Released (alongside In a Model Room and Landsale) a month before the release of P-Model.

Chaos Union, TeslakiteCHTE-0006Remastered by Hirasawa. Part of Disc 2 of the Ashu-on [Sound Subspecies] in the solar system box set, alongside parts of the "Dual Perspective" & "Exercises for the Heavenizer" series of songs from 1981 & 1982. Re-released with new packaging by Kiyoshi Inagaki.
Warner Music Japan, sky station, SS RECORDINGSSS-103Packaged in a paper sleeve to replicate the original LP packaging. Includes new liner notes by music industry writer Dai Onojima.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: P-MODEL / 平沢進 バイオグラフィ. MODEROOM. Fascination, inc..
  2. Book: Takahasi, Kasiko. 2010. 1999. 改訂DIGITAL復刻版 音楽産業廃棄物. Music Industrial Wastes Rev.2.4. P-Model Side — Open Source. 3rd. Fascination. 35.
  3. P-Model Box Catalog, 10 January 1987, p. 2.