[78-L] Glaydys Tsutumi post from 2009 Search
Malcolm
malcolm at 78data.com.invalid
Tue Jul 6 10:11:07 PDT 2021
Hi Mark,
It occurs to me that, if your theory that Nisei went to Japan to record
these very popular records for the occupation troops is correct, that
the artists may have been Los Angeles based and may have been part of a
stable of musicians recording for the Tokyo Records label based there.
It is known that Tokyo initially worked things in reverse, "borrowing"
material from Japan for release on their label for sale to US Nisei
populations. I believe the records were pressed in LA. I am not sure if
the records ever appeared outside of the LA area but I suspect they may
have been available in the San Francisco Bay Area as well. Don't know if
there was a broader distribution area in the US though.
I attempted to document Tokyo further but hit a wall at a certain point
and wasn't able to get any further. Seems there is a lid on research by
any one outside the community and/or those I was sealing woth just
didn't want to go there.
My research when I was actively collecting the label lead me to believe
the Tokyo issues may have been from Japanese "masters" dubbed from the
original pressings.
Malcolm Rockwell
*******
On 7/6/2021 3:17 AM, Mark Thomas wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My understanding is that several of these singers on Japanese pop hits in
> the later 40s and early 50s, during the Occupation (recordings that catered
> to US troops), were Nisei from the US, perhaps Hawaii or California, who
> went to Japan to record these songs because of their English language
> skills. Perhaps her granddaughter can enlighten us, but I thought that
> Gladys Tsutumi was from the U.S.
>
> A number of traditional Japanese songs were given English lyrics (I believe
> unrelated to the original lyrics, not translations), and Tonko Bushi
> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qo-T5cF14kY> has lyrics about Geisha Girls
> and Ginza Ave and sounds totally made up for the western military audience.
> It's super catchy.
>
> I also believe that Ramond Hattori, the arranger on some of these
> recordings, was from the U.S.
>
> Tonko Bushi is on Columbia A 1171. The flip side is Tankoh Bushi by Grace
> Amemiya <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmZTVvvUUwY>. That song is a
> traditional song related to coal miners, but the English lyrics may also be
> unrelated. Grace Amemiya was born in California. On YouTube, besides a
> number of her Japanese recordings, is an oral history interview
> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOPaJndRL9Q> with her from 2011, about her
> experience in an internment camp in the US during WWII.
>
> Best,
> Mark Thomas
>
> On Tue, Jul 6, 2021 at 2:29 AM <ron at fial.com.invalid> wrote:
>
>> There were two posts regarding Gladys Tutsumi found in 2009
>> ( from 78-L mail list administrator)
>>
>> ======================= (1) ============================
>>
>> [78-L] Gladys Tsutsumi
>> Jan Hovers janhovers at hotmail.com
>> Sat Feb 7 06:34:26 PST 2009
>>
>> Previous message: [78-L] Arabphone records
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>>
>> Dear list members,
>>
>> I
>> have a question about a mysterious record. It is a familiar Japanese
>> folksong. But I can´t find
>> any details of it, nor in my guidebooks, nor on the web. It is really a
>> lovely recording.
>>
>> The title is TONKO BUSHI, recorded on (Japanese) Columbia Records, cat.nr.
>> A 1171,
>> matrix M 1212223
>>
>> It is sung by Gladys Tsutsumi with Columbia Orchestra
>> Authors: verse: Michael White, Melody: Masao Koga, Arr.: Raymond Hattori
>>
>> hope to find out more about Gladys Tsutsumi and also about this recording
>> (date
>> and place)
>>
>> The label is partly in English and partly in Japanese. I would be very
>> happy to hear from
>> you!
>>
>> Jan
>> Hovers
>>
>> Amsterdam, The Netherlandswww.78rpm.hovers.nl
>> _________________________________________________________________
>> Jouw nieuws en entertainment, vind je op MSN.nl!
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>>
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>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> ==================== (2) =======================
>>
>> [78-L] Gladys Tsutsumi
>> Hopkins/Kato hopkat at sa2.so-net.ne.jp
>> Sat Feb 7 16:49:50 PST 2009
>>
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>>
>> Don't know anything about Gladys Tsutsumi, but this is a post-war record,
>> so
>> the music world was very conscious of American styles. A lot of singers
>> made
>> up English first names for themselves. Koga Masao is one of the most famous
>> songwriters in Japan, with a long career (from about 1930 to the 1970s, I
>> think) and many of his songs try to combine a folk song sensibility with
>> modern orchestration.
>> David Hopkins
>> Nara, Japan
>>
>>
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