"Cantonese Boy" | ||||
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Single by Japan | ||||
from the album Tin Drum | ||||
B-side | "Burning Bridges" (7") | |||
Released | 14 May 1982 | |||
Recorded | August 1981 | |||
Studio | Odyssey (London, UK) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:44 | |||
Label | Virgin | |||
Songwriter(s) | David Sylvian | |||
Producer(s) |
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Japan singles chronology | ||||
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"Cantonese Boy" is a song by English new wave band Japan, released in May 1982 as the fourth and final single from their 1981 album Tin Drum. The single peaked at number 24 on the UK Singles Chart.[1] The song refers to the enlistment of a Cantonese boy to the Chinese Red Army.[2]
"Cantonese Boy" was released with the B-side "Burning Bridges" on the 7-inch single, taken from the band's previous album Gentlemen Take Polaroids. The 12-inch single two different B-sides: "The Experience of Swimming" and "Gentlemen Take Polaroids", which were originally released on the "Gentlemen Take Polaroids" single in October 1980. A double 7-inch single was also released: the 7-inch single of "Cantonese Boy" and the two 12-inch B-sides, switched around, making it exactly the same as the "Gentlemen Take Polaroids" single.
Reviewing the song for Record Mirror, Sunie Fletcher described it as "a skillful, fluent and textured piece of music" and that as a single "it's a less obvious proposition than its predecessors, "Ghosts" and "Visions of China"", as "its chief shortcoming is the lack of a hook, as they say in the trade, but it's pleasurable listening for all that".[3] Dave Rimmer for Smash Hits wrote that it is "a good song", but "can't really be counted as much more than a stop-gap measure until the boys in rouge re-unite and pen something new".[4]
7": Virgin / VS 502 (UK)[5][6]
Double 7": Virgin / VS 502 (UK)
12": Virgin / VS 502-12 (UK)
Japan
Technical[7]
Chart (1982) | Peak position |
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Ireland (IRMA)[8] | 20 |
UK Singles (OCC)[1] | 24 |