Crazy Cats

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Crazy Cats
クレージーキャッツ
OriginJapan
GenresJazz, Comic Song
Years active1955–2023
Past membersĒtarō Ishibashi (piano) Hajime Hana (drums)
Hitoshi Ueki (vocals)
Kei Tani (trombone)
Hiroshi Inuzuka (bass)
Senri Sakurai (piano)
Shin Yasuda (tenor sax)

The Crazy Cats(クレージーキャッツ, Kurējī Kyattsu)also known as Hajime Hana and the Crazy Cats(ハナ肇とクレージーキャッツ, Hana Hajime to Kurējī Kyattsu)were a Japanese jazz band and comedy group popular in film and television, particularly between the 1950s and 1970s. Led by Hajime Hana, the band's other main members were Kei Tani, Hitoshi Ueki, Hiroshi Inuzuka, Senri Sakurai, Shin Yasuda, and Ētarō Ishibashi.

Band origins

The band was originally formed in 1955 at the end of the first jazz boom in Japan under the name The Cuban Cats.[1][2] Signed to Watanabe Productions, their performances mixed music and comedic bits, in the spirit of Frankie Sakai and the City Slickers, and they soon changed their name to the Crazy Cats.[1][2] At the end of the 1950s, the main members were Hana, Tani, Ueki, Inuzuka, Yasuda, and Ishibashi. Sakurai joined in 1960, and Ishibashi left in 1971.[2]

The group became nationally famous after appearing on the television show "Otona No Manga" starting in 1959.

Kohaku Utagassen.[3] Their popularity also led to a series of films produced at the Toho Studios, the most famous of which was the Musekinin Otoko or Irresponsible Man. The series of films featured Ueki as a salaryman
attempting to advance up the corporate ladder.

Influence

In terms of their music, E. Taylor Atkins has said that "The Crazy Cats are significant for capitalizing and purveying an image of jazz musicians as clownish, slang-slinging ne’er-do-wells. Their audience rewarded the Cats with the longevity of which very few Japanese acts could boast."

Crazy Crazy" as a homage to the band.[4]

Filmography

See also

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ a b c "Kurējī Kyattsu". Kotobank (in Japanese). Asahi Shinbun. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  4. ^ Hoshino, Gen (July 2014). "初の両A面シングル『Crazy Crazy/桜の森』で星野源、ポップにラジカルに突き抜ける!" [Gen Hoshino Breaks into Pop with First Double A-Side Single "Crazy Crazy" / "Sakura no Mori"!]. Rockin'On Japan (Interview) (in Japanese). p. 140–143.

External links