"Bamboo Houses"
Single by Ryuichi Sakamoto & David Sylvian
A-side"Bamboo Music" (double A-side)
Released23 July 1982 (1982-07-23)
Recorded1982
Genre
Length4:13
LabelVirgin
Songwriter(s)
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto
  • David Sylvian
Producer(s)
Ryuichi Sakamoto singles chronology
"Front Line"
(1981)
"Bamboo Houses"
(1982)
"Forbidden Colours"
(1983)
David Sylvian singles chronology
"Bamboo Houses"
(1982)
"Forbidden Colours"
(1983)
Alternative cover

"Bamboo Houses" is a song by Japanese musician-composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and English singer-songwriter David Sylvian, released on Virgin Records in 1982. It reached number 30 in the UK charts in the second week of August 1982.

The double A-side single "Bamboo Houses"/"Bamboo Music" was the first solo project by Sylvian, released while he was still a member of the band Japan. It was the second collaboration between the two, the first being the track "Taking Islands in Africa" on the 1980 Japan album Gentlemen Take Polaroids which featured Sakamoto on keyboards. The "Bamboo Houses" single in turn featured drums by Japan member Steve Jansen, who also appeared in the promo video, and was co-produced by Steve Nye. Similarly, Sakamoto was still a member of the band Yellow Magic Orchestra at the time, though he had already done some previous solo work.

In 1983 Sylvian and Sakamoto would team up again on "Forbidden Colours", the theme song to the Nagisa Oshima film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, along with several other projects in later years.

A remix of "Bamboo Houses" was included on David Sylvian's career retrospective Everything and Nothing in 2000 and A Victim of Stars 1982–2012 in 2012.

Track listings

Composed and arranged by Ryuichi Sakamoto and David Sylvian

  • UK 7" single with gatefold sleeve, Virgin Records VS 510
  1. "Bamboo Houses" (7" Edit) – 4:13
  2. "Bamboo Music" (7" Edit) – 4:40
  • UK 12", Virgin Records VS 510-12
  1. "Bamboo Houses" – 5:26
  2. "Bamboo Music" – 5:38

Chart positions

Chart (1982) Peak
position
UK Singles (OCC)[1] 30

Personnel

Production

References

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