From Che Sent Sat, Jun 6th 1998, 14:11
On Fri, 5 Jun 1998, Solenoid wrote: > Ooooo, if this is the bluish-cover one with them across the bottom edge, > from about '84 or so, it is highly NOT RECOMMENDED, ...unless you have good taste. Solenoid's been listening to too much Nurse With Wound... > NEWSFLASH! ...I just checked some YMO homepages. I once had the > "Naughty Boys" vocal version, so I've never heard the instrumental > version. I do remember that there were significant reggae-pop influences > on this record and quite a bit of new digital sounds (Fairlight..?..that > would make sense given that a year later Sakamoto was all over the > Fairlight) Ok, you're getting closer - Naughty Boys has Hosono, Takehashi & Sakamoto wearing primary colors & bad makeup on a greenish background, Naughty Boys Instrumentals has 3 flags on a blue background. NBI isn't just NB w/o the vocals - the arrangements are for the most part the same, but the mixes are different, w/ Bill Nelson's guitar more prominent (a good thing, really, he plays mostly Ebo guitar on this album). I think it's a very worthwhile album, and it's a good taste of YMO's music if you don't like vocals. I think every IDMer owes it to her or himself to check out YMO's Technodelic & Sakamoto's B2-Unit. From there, I'd recommend BGM & Naughty Boys. If you're into great techno pop, Takehashi's Neuromantic (it came years before Gibson's book, BTW), is a wonderful record with appearances by Bill Nelson & Andy McKaye (sp? - sax player for Roxy Music). Finally, there's the Hi Tech/NO Crime YMO remixe album which has excellent IDM updates of their classics, and their reunion album, Technodon, parts of which classify as IDM, others as weird modern technopop. Che