In 1973 a former member of Yomiuri Advertising's sales department named Yoshimasa Ohnishi decided to start up his own company, Big West, named (in part) as a reference to his last name ("Ohnishi"="Big West"). In 1977 Big West started getting involved with anime production, with its first work being
Chogattai Majutsu Robo Ginguiser, a mech anime that was co-produced by Nippon Animation & Ashi Productions, before also helping produce a number of shows for Sunrise during its early days, most notably
Zambot 3,
Daitarn 3,
Daiohja,
Trider G7, & even the original
Mobile Suit Gundam. However, it'd be in 1982 that Big West truly hit pay dirt when it teamed with Studio Nue & Tatsunoko to create
Super Dimensional Fortress Macross, a mech anime that featured a heavy focus on the kind of pop music that was the style at the time & surpassed all expectations, being extended past its original length & getting two spiritual successors (
Southern Cross &
Orguss) that together would be deemed the
Super Dimensional Series.
Macross' success would lead to Big West making its theatrical debut with 1984's
Macross: Do You Remember Love?, which was also a smash hit, and going into the 90s Big West would continue to co-produce various anime, like the
Apocalypse Zero OVA,
Jushin Liger,
Getter Robo Go,
Irresponsible Captain Tylor, etc. Big West would also return to
Macross with 1992's
Macross II (which it produced without Studio Nue's involvement, & is now considered non-canon), followed by two new (canon) productions in 1994, the OVA series
Macross Plus & the TV series
Macross 7. There is the whole mess regarding Tatsunoko, Harmony Gold, &
Robotech, but I'm not opening that can of worms here.
However, the
Macross franchise isn't the only music-themed TV anime that Big West would produce, and while today it's become immensely forgotten & obscure this
OTHER music-themed anime actually has some historical relevance... but, first, we need to go over a certain satellite television network.

Originally founded on December 25, 1984 as Japan Satellite Broadcasting Co., Ltd., JSB would eventually change its nickname in November 1989 to WOWOW, going from a simple united broadcast licensing application company to a full-on satellite TV service that aired its first broadcast (a 24-hour test titled A Japan-US Two-Way Call-in Show: Space TV Will Change the World) on November 29, 1990. The following February WOWOW started offering "scrambled" broadcasts, i.e. you needed to pay a subscription fee to watch it, & later that April traditional "unscrambled" analog broadcasts started airing, eventually resulting in WOWOW getting 800,000 subscribers by 1992. At first a good chunk of WOWOW's offerings (~40%) came from outside of Japan, & the network even got Harrison Ford to act as the spokesperson for a bit, with its first real "hit" being the Japanese broadcast of the late David Lynch's cult-classic TV series Twin Peaks. However, WOWOW was also known initially for re-running animation, both Disney classics & Japanese series that were primarily meant for kids, but eventually WOWOW seemingly realized that if it wanted to remain competitive in the market, especially when other satellite networks started popping up, then it would need to start directly getting involved in the production of new anime... and, coincidentally enough, right around that time the concept of the "modern day late-night anime infomercial" was gaining traction.
The end result, then, was that on "April 10, 1998 at 25:00", i.e. April 11 at 1:00 am, WOWOW debuted the first episode of
Nessa no Haoh Gandalla, or (as the end of the OP sequence states)
Gandalla, The King of the Burning Desert, the first ever anime that was 100% original & exclusive to WOWOW; this was aired unscrambled, so anyone could watch it if they received the signal. This was a Big West joint, in this case a co-pro between them & Ashi Pro, and in fact was conceived by Yoshimasa Ohnishi, the head of honcho of Big West himself, in what would be his sole creative credit (for anime, at least). However, to be fair, Ohnishi was only credited for "Original Story" & "Creative Supervisor", so it's not as though he himself wrote any of the literal scripts. While
Gandalla would be the first late-night anime (if not possibly the first anime, in general) to debut first on a satellite network it wouldn't be the anime that made people take true notice of the concept. Instead, it'd be the follow up that WOWOW debuted the week after
Gandalla's 26th & final episode aired on October 16, 1998 that actually made people take note of WOWOW as a real potential contender (& prove the viability of satellite TV as an alternate option to debut anime via)...
a "complete" airing of some show that had previously only partially aired on TV Tokyo earlier in 1998 as a last-minute prime time replacement called Cowboy Bebop. Yeah, the WOWOW run of
Cowboy Bebop would steal whatever attention
Gandalla had as "the first", and after the VHS & LD release finished up in 1999 you pretty much never heard anything about
Gandalla ever again. The only exception so far was on July 1, 2015, when character designer Junichi Hayama paid his respects to director Hidehito Ueda, following his passing, by
sharing a new Gandalla drawing on Twitter. Even then, Big West & Ashi Pro have never re-released the anime in any form since the VHS & LD release, not even via streaming, and with Big West now able to handle international licensing of anything
Macross without Harmony Gold interfereing with things (minus the original
SDF, which Harmony Gold still has international control over) there's really no reason for them to ever think about
Gandalla again. Hell, even
G-on Riders has since been re-released via Blu-Ray & streaming in Japan; what's up with
that, Big West?!
However, is Gandalla really an anime that deserves to be forgotten under the sands of time & left to dry out in the vast anime desert? My year-long celebration(?) of the 30th Anniversary of the modern-day late-night anime infomercial continues with a review of "that OTHER music-themed Big West anime", and a true obscurity, Nessa no Haoh Gandalla!