Watch ‘Queen In Japan – Part 1’: Episode 14 Of ‘The Greatest’ Video Series
In April 1975, the band embarked on an eight-night tour of Japan – the beginning of a very special relationship with the country and its people.
‘Queen The Greatest’, which celebrates some of Queen’s most memorable songs, performances and achievements this week takes a look at the extraordinary story of ‘Queen In Japan.’ You can watch it in full below.
In the early years, Queen understandably worked hard to make headway in the UK and USA markets. However, there was another country that had already started to take the band to their hearts, signaling the beginning of a deep bond that endures to this very day.
As early as 1974, in Japan, Music Life Magazine had started to feature pictures of the band and report on their albums. The style of music and stage show struck an immediate chord, and so in April 1975, Queen embarked on an eight-night tour of Japan. Their very first concert on Japanese soil would be at the world famous Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, an arena dedicated to martial arts and concerts, and it’s fair to say the band had no idea what was in store for them…
Roger Taylor: “We knew there was sort of demand for us there and so we tagged it on to the end of an American tour. We had a holiday in Hawaii and then it was, sort of, logical, so we went there. We arrived at the airport and suddenly realized it was on a scale different to that which we’d imagined – there were thousands of people there, just to welcome us. Normally you just don’t get that sort of thing anywhere.”
In an exclusive interview, Record Company Exec, Promoter and long-term friend of Queen, Kaz Utsunomiya, recalls that extraordinary arrival…
Kaz Utsunomiya: “I don’t think anyone really guessed that three thousand people would turn up at the airport. Anyone who turned up at the airport would think that this is like, the second coming of the Beatles.”
Kaz explains how the Queen In Japan phenomenon had its beginnings: “In those days the rock group band was mainly supported by the male audience, but then the fact that Music Life (magazine) put in Queen pictures opened up a whole new world with female fans, and caught Japanese fans in both genders, male and female.”
This first encounter marked the beginning of a deep bond between Queen and Japan, with each leaving a lasting impression on the other. So much so, it inspired Brian May to write a song as a special tribute to their Japanese audience with the song “Teo Torriatte”, featured on the band’s 1976 A Day At The Races album containing two choruses sung in Japanese.
Kaz Utsunomiya: “They never expected the band to come up with a song like “Teo Torriatte”, which is mainly for the Japanese market. The band has different songs for all over the world, but I think “Teo Torriatte” you can only listen to them doing that in Japan.”
Queen would regularly tour Japan right up until 1985, but as Kaz explains, the band always embraced a unique approach to where they performed.
Kaz Utsunomiya: “In the early days we toured different cities all over Japan. So we’d go to Sapporo in Hokkaido which is in the northern part of Japan, and we would go to Sendai in southern part and it was really interesting because not that many bands used to tour all round Japan.”
“A lot of international bands come to Japan, they go to Tokyo and Osaka. A lot of people never had the chance of seeing the international bands in the cities outside of Tokyo and Osaka, which they (Queen) did and which made them bigger and a very unique international act in Japan. I think that also helped the band understand the Japanese culture, Japanese history, and the Japanese fans.”
Watch every episode of Queen’s ‘The Greatest’ series at the band’s official YouTube channel.