Japanese Breakfast

Birthday March 29, 1989

Birth Sign Aries

Age 34 years old

#16815 Most Popular

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Japanese Breakfast is an American indie pop band headed by musician Michelle Zauner.

1964

Jubilee was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album and Japanese Breakfast for Best New Artist at the 64th Annual Grammy Awards and became the band's first album to chart on the Billboard 200, where it peaked at 56.

1993

Unlike the pop songs she writes for Japanese Breakfast, the Sable soundtrack is mostly ambient music. Zauner took inspiration from other game soundtracks, notably the soundtracks to the Final Fantasy games, Secret of Mana (1993), Chrono Cross (1999) and two games in The Legend of Zelda series: Majora's Mask (2000) and Breath of the Wild (2017).

2010

To promote the album, the band opened for Japanese-American singer-songwriter Mitski alongside American musician Jay Som and released a music video for the song "Everybody Wants to Love You" which was later ranked as the 154th best song of the 2010s decade by Quinn Moreland of Pitchfork.

2013

Zauner started the band as a side project in 2013, when she was leading the Philadelphia-based emo group Little Big League.

She has said that she named the band after seeing a GIF of Japanese breakfast and deciding that the term would be considered "exotic" to Americans; she also thought it would make others wonder what a Japanese breakfast consists of.

The first Japanese Breakfast release was June (2013), the result of a month-long project in which Zauner and Rachel Gagliardi recorded one song a day and posted them on the Tumblr blog rachelandmichelledojune.

2014

In 2014, she returned to her hometown of Eugene, Oregon, to care for her ailing mother.

She continued to record music and songs, first to cope with stress, then, after her mother died, with grief.

In 2014, Zauner participated as Japanese Breakfast in a song project with musicians Gabrielle Smith, Florist, Frankie Cosmos, and Small Wonder, who posted songs daily on the Tumblr blog may5to12songs.

She released her songs from the project on Bandcamp as two digital albums: Where Is My Great Big Feeling?, released on June 6; and American Sound on June 24.

Both were released weeks later as the cassette tape American Sound/Where Is My Great Big Feeling.

While in Oregon with her family in 2014, Zauner continued recording as Japanese Breakfast, starting with samples of music as a meditative exercise and "instant gratification".

She said she had more to say after Tropical Jinx, the 2014 studio album by her emo group Little Big League.

2015

In 2015, while working at an advertising agency, Zauner recorded her first studio album as Japanese Breakfast: Psychopomp, named for the mythological creature.

She said her "dark and heavy-handed" record dealt with her mother's death, although she tried to make the music urgent and "sonically upbeat."

2016

The songs eventually became Japanese Breakfast's debut studio album: Psychopomp (2016), released by Yellow K Records.

The album's rollout on Yellow K Records began in January 2016 with the release of the single "In Heaven" via Stereogum.

A second single, titled "Everybody Wants to Love You" was released on February 18, 2016, and the album itself was released on April 1, 2016.

Around this time, Japanese Breakfast signed with Dead Oceans, which on June 23, 2016, announced the signing and said Psychopomp would be re-released internationally.

A music video for "Jane Cum" was also released the same day.

2017

Its critical and commercial success led Japanese Breakfast to sign with the record label Dead Oceans, which released the band's second and third studio albums: Soft Sounds from Another Planet (2017) and Jubilee (2021).

On May 4, 2017, Japanese Breakfast released the single "Machinist" and announced the upcoming release of a second studio album, Soft Sounds from Another Planet, whose lyrics are largely concerned with Zauner's detachment and trauma.

The song "Boyish" was released as a single on June 7, 2017.

A third single from the album, "Road Head", was released on July 6, 2017.

The full album was released on July 14, 2017.

To promote the album, the band released a video game, "Japanese BreakQuest", in which the main character, "J-Brekkie", gathers a band to prevent an alien invasion.

The game was developed by Zauner and game designer Elaine Fath, and uses songs from the album, rendered as 8-bit MIDI tracks by Peter Bradley.

To support the album, Japanese Breakfast toured Oceania, Asia and North America from 2017 to 2019.

Along the way, the band opened for English shoegaze band Slowdive, American musician (Sandy) Alex G, and Canadian duo Tegan and Sara.

On October 19, 2017, a music video for "Body is a Blade" was released.

It was animated using old family photographs and video of Zauner visiting locations from the photos.

She described it as "a really personal mixed media piece, almost like a moving scrapbook".

2018

On February 13, 2018, the music video for "Boyish" was released.

It depicts a girl going to a high school dance, where Zauner and her band, accompanied by fellow indie musician Leslie Bear, are playing a set.

The video also features a cameo appearance by musician Lindsey Jordan and was directed by Zauner, who at the time of its release described it as her "favorite video yet" and has retrospectively considered it to be her "magnum opus".

In 2018, indie game developer Shedworks sent Zauner preliminary images from their video game Sable and commissioned her to write its soundtrack.

Her commission was announced during E3 2018.

2019

The game was to be released in 2019, but was delayed twice.

2020

In 2020, during the COVID-19 lockdown, Zauner began reworking the songs after playing updated versions of the game.