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SA (also known outside of Japan as Samurai Attack) is a Japanese band that plays a heavily oi-influenced style of punk rock.

Originally formed by vocalist Taisei Mabuchi in 1984, the band self-released its first single, "I Got Position," in 1984. They found a wider audience due to their contributions to the Oi of Japan compilation album, released in 1985. Taisei broke up the band in 1987. Taisei joined the Tokyo-based hard rock band Bad Messiah. The original lineup of SA briefly reunited in 1999,

The bands first full-length LP, You Must Stand Up My Comrades, was released in 2000.

In 2001, Taisei gathered a new lineup. The new guitarist for the band was Naoki, a founding member of the early J-punk band Laughin' Nose, and more recently a member of both the long-running pop-oi band Cobra and the J-pop band Dog Fight. Also hailing from Dog Fight was the new bass player, Ken. Shoei, the band's new drummer, completed the lineup.

The first album recorded with this new lineup was Great Operation, released in July of 2002 and featuring what became the band's signature song, "Don't Deny, Give It A Try!!". A CD single, Who's The Next Upstart?, was released later the same year, featuring a cover of the classic Sham 69 song "Borstal Breakout." A mini-LP entitled Stiff Upper Lip was released in March 2003, followed by the band's third full-length, Matchless Attack, in June of 2004. Later that same year, the British label Anagram Records licensed a selection of songs from all of the band's Pineapple Records releases and compiled them onto a 20-track CD, entitled simply S.A. "Samurai Attack!". This was the first (and so far only) of the band's recordings to be distributed widely outside of Japan.

A full-length LP, Primal Yell, was released in 2006. In 2007, SA toured with the platinum-selling American punk band Rancid in Japan. A mini-LP, Beyond I, was released on Pineapple in 2007, followed by another full-length album, Vandals Bop, in 2008.

SA's music, though clearly rooted in Oi and late-70's/early-80's punk rock, is characterized by often-breakneck tempos that often reach (or exceed) a speed that could be considered thrash, as well as an adventurousness that is rather unusual for the genre; various of their songs have utilized instruments such as horns and banjos, and abrupt timing changes are quite frequent. Their songs typically mix both Japanese- and English language lyrics, often with primarily Japanese verses and primarily or entirely English choruses.

The artwork of the band's releases is notable both for its garishness and for its frequent use of fascistic imagery (particularly on the cover of Matchless Attack, which appears to depict a Nuremberg-style rally with the four members of the band as its focal point), although a fascistic outlook is not at all evident in the band's lyrics. The latter are characterized by a pro-action, positivist outlook