Background A Taste of Honey vocalist Janice-Marie Johnson would recall how at age nine she had heard
Kyu Sakamoto's "Sukiyaki" on the radio in the summer of 1963 and said: "Mom! Buy me this record!", as despite not understanding the lyrics she was deeply moved by the song. Constantly playing the single, Johnson phonetically learned its lyrics and taught them to her sister, with the pair participating in neighborhood talent shows singing "Sukiyaki" while performing their approximation of an Oriental dance number. Years later, after A Taste of Honey had scored their 1978 number-one hit "
Boogie Oogie Oogie", Johnson heard the
Linda Ronstadt hit remake of
Smokey Robinson and the Miracles' "
Ooo Baby Baby" on her car radio causing Johnson to realize that remaking a 1960s hit could be a good career move for A Taste of Honey, with Johnson's obvious choice for the remake being her beloved "Sukiyaki". Johnson contacted the song's Japanese lyricist
Rokusuke Ei who provided her with a literal translation of what he had written. As this translation did not yield complete sentences in English, Johnson endeavored to write a new set of lyrics she felt would capture the spirit of the song. According to Johnson, when Cecil Hale, vice-president of
Capitol Records, heard her sing the lyrics she had written for "Sukiyaki" in the slow balladic style she envisioned for the track, "he said, 'absolutely not! Black people don't want to hear Japanese music.' I was stunned [having been] so sure he would like it. I looked at him and I said 'Last time I looked in a mirror I was black and I want to hear it. Producer
George Duke, who was assigned to produce the upcoming A Taste of Honey album
Twice as Sweet, shared Hale's lack of enthusiasm. Duke recalled: Man, what am I going to do with "Sukiyaki"?' I thought [Johnson] was crazy, but I said 'If that's what she wants to do, I'll do it. Johnson would recall Duke, "thought we could do a kind of uptempo version [but] I [saw] it as a love ballad, which is how it was done. [Duke] did a fantastic arrangement." Johnson urged for "Sukiyaki" to be the next single The "Sukiyaki" single was packaged in a picture sleeve showing Johnson and her A Taste of Honey partner, Hazel Payne, wearing
kimono, and the duo were similarly dressed in their television performances to promote the single. These performances featured a traditional
Japanese fan dance by Johnson, while Payne (who was not featured on the recording of "Sukiyaki") played (or in mimed performances appeared to play) June Kuramoto's koto part. A number-one hit on both the R&B and
A/C chart, "Sukiyaki" crossed over to number three on the
Billboard Hot 100 peaking at that position on June 13, 1981.
Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts ==4 P.M. version==