Thousand Knives  

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-"One of the earliest uses of the [[Roland TR-808]] for a live performance was by [[Yellow Magic Orchestra]] in December [[1980]] in the song "[[Thousand Knives]]," composed by [[Ryuichi Sakamoto]] in 1978. The hand-clap sound was later publicized by YMO's innovative album BGM, released March 1981 in Japan, used again on "1000 Knives," as well as in another of Sakamoto's songs, "Music Plans."" --Sholem Stein+"One of the earliest uses of the [[Roland TR-808]] for a live performance was by [[Yellow Magic Orchestra]] in December [[1980]] in the song "[[Thousand Knives]]," composed by [[Ryuichi Sakamoto]] in 1978. The hand-clap sound was later publicized by YMO's innovative album ''[[BGM]]'', released March 1981 in Japan, used again on "1000 Knives," as well as in another of Sakamoto's songs, "Music Plans."" --Sholem Stein
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Revision as of 16:53, 13 March 2019

"One of the earliest uses of the Roland TR-808 for a live performance was by Yellow Magic Orchestra in December 1980 in the song "Thousand Knives," composed by Ryuichi Sakamoto in 1978. The hand-clap sound was later publicized by YMO's innovative album BGM, released March 1981 in Japan, used again on "1000 Knives," as well as in another of Sakamoto's songs, "Music Plans."" --Sholem Stein

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Thousand Knives (also known as Thousand Knives of Ryuichi Sakamoto) is Ryuichi Sakamoto's first solo album. The album is named after Henri Michaux's description of the feeling of using mescaline in Misérable Miracle.



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