Dear Kaname Production, I dedicate this one to you ♥︎!

If one gets into anime from the 1980s the usual practice (like so many other interests as well) is to start with biggest and brightest names, the so-called mainstream of what is well known and popular. You will no doubt find a world of awesome titles that you don’t find in today’s production lineup. But much like music, you may start off with who had the biggest hits, or sold the most concert tickets and eventually lead yourself into the aisles of the lesser known bands and singers… the indie scene, the ‘alternative’ if you may. Studios like AIC, Ashi, Ghibli, Madhouse, Nippon Animation, Studio Pierrot, Sunrise, Tatsunoko, TMS and Toei were some of the biggest, or more familiar names in anime in the 1980s, but there were smaller names as well like Unicorn and even the burgeoning Studio Gainax.

For me though there was a little studio by the name of Kaname Production that seemed to always show up at my doorstep with something interesting to watch. After watching titles like Birth, The Humanoid, Leda: Fantastic Adventure of Yohko and Windaria and relating them back to the Kaname name I became obsessed with tracking down as much of their small catalog. Kaname of course also provided a lot of support work for a multitude of titles throughout the 1980s, but I am going to concentrate on the work they produced, or played a major role in. If you want to see their complete (at least I think its complete?) portfolio check the Anime News Network page for them here. By the way all my research for titles focused on what ANN, Anime Planet and MyAnimeList had listed.

Kaname’s time would be short lived. Beginning in 1982, Kaname would be headed by former Ashi Production staff (now known as Production Reed) and would only last until 1988. A short run, but sometimes great things can’t last forever. One of the key staffers would be a young director Kunihiko Yayama. Recognize the name? Besides early work with GoShogun and Minky Momo, he would direct several Kaname classics: Plawres Sanshiro, Leda: Fantastic Adventure of Yohko and Windaria… and later he worked on something called Pokemon, which I believe was a little popular for a while (yes I am being sarcastic).

Now to those of you who ask why I have such an admiration for Kaname, I have several key factors reasons to present. I can begin with a goofy answer, I just don’t know. It’s like a gut feeling and something about their work is just downright appealing to me. Perhaps because it is a small name and I don’t have a lot of competition when I say I am a fan of Kaname… uh what’s that?… never heard of it… EXACTLY! I do appreciate the artwork and character designs and in many ways the look from Leda, The Humanoid, Windaria and the first episode of Bavi Stock are very consistent. The quirkiness of the stories are also appealing. Birth is odd, but genius (to me at least), The Humanoid has a certain charm to it (COFFEE!), Leda is adorable and Windaria is just a downright masterpiece of tragic drama. I guess once I learned of the all that was and is known as Kaname I just had to jump in and just keep enjoying the ride. … “What a long strange trip it’s been.”

Now let me present a roll call of Kaname’s more prominent productions. Again these are anime in which Kaname played a major role in the production of the total product and is not their total breadth of work. …

Bavi Stock

Bavi_1


Birth

Birth2_1


Dream Dimensional Hunter Fandora

DDHF_1


The Humanoid

humanoid2


Leda: Fantastic Adventure of Yohko

leda4


Plawres Sanshiro (still need to see this one)

plwres0


Rainbow Signal: Hi-Fi Set

RS_HFS_2


Watt Poe (to Bokura no Ohanashi)

WattPoe_2


Windaria

Windaria_4

I consider this more than a salute to a little studio that had a small historical footnote in the totality of the Japanese animation context. In other words, this is my personal love letter to you Kaname. As a fan of this studio’s work I am thankful to everyone who put in their time, effort and skills towards every production that Kaname worked on. Some of these anime are forgettable titles (shovel ware?), many are oddities that only hard corps folks like me give their time towards and then there are a select few that are downright dark horse classics that belong on any top rating list. When it comes to anime from the 1980s, Kaname may not have been the most successful, or longest lasting studio, but it is definitely one that embodies the heart of that decade as well as being a great example of how beautiful cel drawn anime looks and moves on screen.

For more info… a whole lot more :)… visit Animétudes (I bow before thee for all the research you have done)

239 : Rainbow Signal: Hi-Fi Set

I am going to be the first to admit I knew nothing of the musical group Hi-Fi Set before watching this little half-hour presentation.  Beyond being an anime title from my beloved decade of the 1980s, there was another reason I had interest in this title… the studio that produced it. Kaname Production was a little studio that made anime in the 1980s that has a certain flavor that has captivated my heart. Not that I love every bit of their work, but I have appreciated each piece produced by this former group of creators. The newest addition to my viewing time was an OVA released in 1985, Rainbow Signal: Hi-Fi Set.

RS_HFS_1Music and anime are always a welcome combination. Hi-fi Set was a group that had been around for about a decade when Rainbow Signal: Hi-Fi Set was released in 1985. What spurred on the reason to create an anime flavored mix of music video styled shorts I don’t know and to be honest it does not matter much to me. I accept and love each title as it is. The artwork is fun moving between more abstract pieces of a minimalist bird in flight and a romantic story between two innocent dinosaurs like beings. Intersperse this between some live action moments of Hi-Fi Set performing and even a few spots of the trio being animated and you get the idea of what Rainbow Signal: Hi-Fi Set is all about. No need to overthink this one!

RS_HFS_2Romantic was a good choice for a description earlier not so much for the animation, but to Hi-Fi’s musical style. I hold this opinion from what I have heard in the OVA as well as the odd titles in doing a random search. Slick and polished, this is a very clean-cut type of romantic adult contemporary-like  pop music, that some would say is very ‘vanilla’. It reminds me of The Carpenters, and I am not a big fan or their work either, but there are a few of their songs that I absolutely do enjoy. Admit you probably do too. 😉 Who doesn’t love a sappy non-offensive love song from time to time?

That’s all I have folks, Rainbow Signal: Hi-Fi Set is a relic from a more innocent feeling time, a time I know that is still around, because the music of Hi-Fi set  is still with us all… now get down and groove to this number, it’s burning up the charts…

#4b : Birth

For my original entry for Birth, click here.

Sometimes you have to recover your tracks in order to move forward. In terms of classic anime and in particular, Birth, I have a little more to say…

Now this is what I call a proper cartoon! Action, adventure, screwy comedy and fluid animation, like water,  that reminds me of a sci-fi fantasy version of Looney Tunes (hmm? Did you forget about Duck Dodgers?). Unique character designs for the time, a product of Kaname Production… I bow down to this studio with so much love and admiration… life, death, spiritual cosmology on multiple levels, a sword (the Shade to be precise) and, and… well, this is Birth. One of my all time favorite OVA releases from the 1980s, if not one of my top ten, no five, maybe three anime of all time. A true animation playhouse, 1984’s Birth hits me on so many levels: there’s my inner immortal child, my current Zen and Taoist adult self, my high brow artist snob and even my self proclaimed 80s otaku who all enjoy the crazy sci-fi fantasy, the spastic humor, that aesthetic that only Japanese animation can produce and the deeper spirituality of this gem.

Birth2_1Long ago I wrote about Birth right at the beginning of this website’s inception (it was entry #4) and it’s high time I give another shout out to this jewel of an OVA. Some of you may not be a fan of this show and some of you I know are totally passionate about this one-off oddity like me. I am not going to go over the synopsis of this production again, that was the job for my first entry… or was it? Does the plot really matter when the proverbial ride of watching this production becomes the major enjoyment. We do have a story… an alien world, Aqualoid, inhabited by organic life, some are humanoid, and Inorganic invaders who are at a tug of war struggle in terms of survival. This isn’t a war per se, more like opposing forces in nature balancing themselves out via an animated free for all… or perhaps an overdone chase scene set to a battle of life versus death which renews itself without realizing it.

Birth2_2Birth exudes style no question, but it is the more profound looks at life, death and the natural cycles of balance that appeal more to my eye with each viewing. Has my listening to Alan Watts lectures, reading the Tao Te Ching and studying astrological and mythological practices found a way into my viewing of anime? Guilty as charged! The ghostlike Arlia drops the initial clues when speaking to our quartet of protagonists. She states that the invading Inorganics and the native organic life forms are both products of the universe. The inclusion of evil, or destructive… malefic influences are important to continue the cycle of life. We often like to say let’s get rid of war and disease, etc. and live in total harmony and peace, but those more challenging elements are a part of what harmony is all about. How would you know the sweet if you didn’t experience the bitter and the sour. Sometimes we have to let go of something even if it is painful.

Birth2_3And now for an even bigger topic… death. Much like Space Runaway Ideon (awesome show), everyone and everything gets annihilated at the end of Birth. Yet out of this heavy destruction returns the possibility of life. A new ‘birth’… now the title makes perfect sense. Our heroes truly did not die, they just changed, evolved, or transformed and from the look on their faces they seem to be in a state of joy being free of their 3D bodies… but wait this is a cartoon… would 2D be more appropriate? This anime among other influences has really left an influence on me in regards to viewing death. It is not a terrible end, only a possibility to start over yet again. Freedom!

Birth2_4Finally let’s look at cosmology. The universe from my understanding exists on many levels, perhaps dimensions, and each is interconnected with the others. Harmony on one level can create chaos on another and vice versa… thank you Alan Watts. Could these life forms on the planet Aqualoid actually exist as a lower level to say the ethereal character Arlia? We zoom out at the end to find this was all in Arlia’s eye, or perhaps her mind. Could the Aqualoid population be  part of her internal organs and bloodstream? Or perhaps it was only just a dream? Either  way  life and conciousness are much more complex than than tangible surface we witness with our five senses. We may have an Aqualoid inside of all of us, or perhaps we are an Aqualoid for a higher level of being?

Time to get off the high horse now. I also love that pop/electronic music soundtrack composed by future Studio Ghibli collaborator Joe Hisaishi. It is a nice showing off of his talents beyond his epic orchestral scores that he most known for. All in all Birth is a perfect package to satisfy my eclectic interests. The more you watch Birth the more you get out of it, but then again my interests in astrology, cosmology and spirituality have continued to grow alongside my passion for Japanese animation. So perhaps it is a fresh viewing each time I watch Birth because it seems like everyday I see the world through another filter of consciousness.