Japan’s Seven Postwar Decades

A Revisionist History of Postwar Pop

Society Culture

Wajima Yūsuke [Profile]

In the public imagination, the pop hits of the Occupation years epitomize a brand-new culture of freedom and democracy. But a closer look at the roots of Japan’s early postwar pop scene reveals a far more complex interaction of influences and ideologies.

Impact of the US Bases

Miki Torirō’s musical orientation was in part a product of the Western musical education he received before the war, but another important influence was the music broadcast by the US Armed Services radio during the Occupation. The complex, rich orchestration and sophisticated background vocals of America’s big bands provided him with a model for high-quality popular music. In fact, before he began working exclusively for NHK, Miki had been performing for the US troops in Japan.

In the immediate postwar period, a considerable number of Japanese musicians made a living providing American-style entertainment at nightclubs and other establishments catering to members of the US military. This parallel universe thrived in close proximity to the Japanese pop scene that we have examined thus far, though it was remote from the everyday experience of the average Japanese.

As the Occupation drew to an end, the singers who had launched their careers in those nightclubs began to direct their efforts toward Japanese audiences. Heading the list were Chiemi Eri and Yukimura Izumi, who were both the same age as Misora Hibari. The media crowned Hibari, Chiemi, and Izumi the Three Sisters of Japanese pop music.

The “entertainment production” companies (Japanese-style talent agencies) that have played such a dominant role in the Japanese entertainment industry since the 1960s—serving not only as agents, managers, and publicists but also as incubators for new talent—evolved from the activities of the entrepreneurs who carved out a living managing bands and booking acts to keep the Occupation forces entertained. Until then, impresarios were attached to specific locales and venues, and a single manager or lackey was the most an entertainer could hope for in the way of personal staff.

After the Japanese “rockabilly” craze of 1958, talent agencies were eager to sign young performers to appear on the new medium of TV and give their impression of American rock and roll. By the late 1960s, the old structure of the Japanese entertainment industry, rooted in the vertical integration of the motion picture and record businesses, had given way to a completely new scene dominated by television and a few powerful talent agencies. But any detailed discussion of this phase will have to await another opportunity.

Individual and Collective Memory

In the foregoing, I have tried to provide a brief analysis of the popular music scene in the early postwar era from the standpoint of prewar and wartime linkages, the media environment, and ideological influences. In doing so, I have deliberately emphasized circumstances that clash with the prevailing image of postwar popular music, including the sharp criticism directed at certain songs, people, and phenomena that we now associate with the spirit of the nation.

Needless to say, the foregoing is a selective presentation reflecting my own focus and interpretation. I do not claim any monopoly on historical truth. My primary aim has been to show, first, that popular music did not undergo a total transformation immediately after the war, as many people assume; and second, that some of the best-known and best-loved songs of the postwar era did not enjoy universal acclaim at the time.

Songs are an inextricable component of our individual memories of a given era. And certain songs may become an index of the collective memory of that era. But the formation of a collective memory out of our individual memories is the result of a complex interaction of cultural and political influences at each stage along the way, as suggested by the transformation of songs like “Ringo no uta”—which many influential critics found repulsive at the time—into positive symbols of the era as a whole and the people who lived through it. Moreover, the collective memory is forever being revised and updated. As the Japanese people take stock of the last seven decades, who knows what new version of postwar pop music history will emerge from the process?

(Originally published in Japanese on June 30, 2015. Banner photos courtesy of Nippon Columbia and Jiji.)

Related Tags

postwar music NHK GHQ Hattori Ryoichi US Occupation Misora Hibari Jazz

Wajima YūsukeView article list

Associate professor of musicology and theater studies, Osaka University, specializing in popular music, history of popular culture, and Afro-Brazilian music. Received his doctorate in literature from the University of Tokyo. Author of Tsukurareta “Nihon no kokoro” shinwa—enka o meguru sengo taishū ongaku shi (Manufacturing the “Heart of Japan” Mythos—Enka and the History of Postwar Popular Music) and winner of the 2011 Suntory Prize for Social Sciences and Humanities. He also penned “The Birth of Enka,” a chapter in Made in Japan: Studies in Popular Music.

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