Total Number of CDs in Collection Anime-Import: 138
Title : # | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | I | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | Y | | | | | | | |


 



Page Number: 9 / 30
 

I WAS BORN TO FALL IN LOVE

Artist: Okui Masami
Duration: 17:09
Genre: Jpop
Label: キングレコード
My Rating:
Rating: 5.0 (1 votes)
Release: 1994
Summary: シングル版はものすごくエコーがかかっていて本人の声が変わって聞こえるくらいです。
アルバム版を聞いたとき別人かと思いました。
しかし、この曲は「コンパイラ」というOVAの主題歌ですが、
アニメの雰囲気にぴったりな音楽と場面が浮かんでくるような歌詞がとてもマッチしていて
すばらしいです。
彼女のCDを初めて買ったのがこれだったので思い入れも一番です。
ぜひ、シングル版を聞いてください。


 

I'm proud

Artist: Tomomi Kahala
Duration: 22:19
Genre: Jpop
Label: ジェネオン エンタテインメント
My Rating:
Rating: 5.0 (2 votes)
Release: 1996
Summary: Tomomi started off her career by becoming a model for Non-no (much like Hamasaki Ayumi and ex-TK artist, hitomi). She soon meet Komuro Tetsuya, whom then took her under his wing. He had her change her name from Shimogawara Tomomi to Kahala Tomomi so that their romaji name initials would be the same. It didn't take long before the two would became lovers.

In September of 1995 Tomomi debuted with the single, "Keep yourself alive". The single reached #8 on the Oricon, selling 370,070 copies. She followed a month later with the single, "I BELIEVE". The single was an instant hit reaching #4 on the Oricon charts and selling over 1,000,000 copies.

1996 provided to be Tomomi's most successful year. She released her third single, "I'm Proud", which reached #2 on the Oricon chart. The single ended up selling more than her previous. Tomomi's debut album "LOVE BRACE" was released on 1996.06.03, and reached #1 on the Oricon. The album sold over 2 million copies, and TK dubbed the album his best work. A month later she released the album-cut single "LOVE BRACE" which sold less then all of her previous releases.

At the end of the 1996 Tomomi was highly successful, making it onto the year charts with three singles in the top 50 as well as her debut album. "I'm proud" was the highest ranking because it sold 1,372,420 copies, making it the #8 single of the year out being her rival Amuro Namie (her single "Don't Wanna Cry" sold 1,371,730 being the #9 single).


 

Indigo Suite: Best Ingido Music

Artist: The Indigo
Duration: 60:24
Genre: Jpop
Label: Geneon [Pioneer]
My Rating:
Rating: 4.5 (2 votes)
Release: 2005
Comments: Autographed
Summary: The Japanese jazz/pop/folk group The Indigo make great music that's an alternative for those tired of the usual Jpop. Consisting of lead singer Miki Taoka and guitarist Yuichi Ichikawa, who also does the recording and mixing of their songs, the Indigo have kind of gotten the sharp end of the stick, as some of their songs are the ending theme songs to popular anime. They are great in themselves, but are overshadowed by the opening theme songs.

Case in point on The Indigo Suite, their greatest hits: their songs "Namoshirenu Hana" or "A Flower Without A Name" and "I Do" from both seasons of Ai Yori Aoshi are low key compared to the emotional pop stylings of Yoko Ishida's opening themes. Both are in the extended versions. The mid-paced "Flower" is my favourite song here, with its cheery keyboards, relaxed guitars and faint airy synths, with that pondering opening question: "What is the weakest thing in the world? Even so, it exists to protect the two." "I Do" is a bit more uptempo, kind of a lukewarm Stock-Aitken-Waterman number without the layered bubblegum, but with a strong bassline, especially with that strong opening percussive beat, and a trumpet solo in the bridge.

Most of the time, a gentle warm jazz/pop sound that sometimes sounds like Swing Out Sister or Basia emerges. "Blue" was their debut single, a laid back strummed guitar that reminds me of Basia, and with some intelligent lyrics. "What color do you use to paint a dream from your childhood?" asks Taoka. A similar sound, with some 70's stylings colors the theme of an endless journey and a dream made together by two of "Under The Blue Sky," the end theme of Someday's Dreamers, and in songs like "Brand New Day" and the bubbly joy of falling in love of "Beauty,"

A brassy section and some upbeat percussion and keyboards gives "To Love You More" a Swing Out Sister-like sound, with a catchy chorus that highlight Miss Taoka's warm gentle vocals. I'm reminded of that breezy feeling of coasting down the highway and feeling unknowingly perky, that Curtis Mayfield's "Move On Up"-particularly the brass rhythms-and 5th Dimension's "Up Up And Away" in "Eternal Love," where the joy of a journey begun by a couple discovering what's beyond that sky.

Shades of the Carpenters' "Rainy Days and Mondays" tinge the introspective "Questioning" and of finding one's own answers in the lonely world: "everyone questions the directions given by someone else/I leave my footprints behind while I walk alone." Love the harmonies of the chorus's backup vocals!

The ephemeral nature of things color the pleading of "Sunflower." The protagonist points out how "the things you love for my sake will disappear in time" particularly physical attributes, kind of like the title flower, which eventually wilt and go to seed, so to love her for her sake. Things take on a despairing nature in "Pain," of wanting something that genuinely heals and clear away the clouds of disillusion: "Alone, I hold the pain that is engraved in my heart/I don't need words to cover up a lie/I just want words to break the sky now."

From their first cover songs album, My Fair Melodies, is their laid back breezy samba/soul version of Roberta Flack's "Feel Like Makin' Love"

With influences from 70's soul and 80's pop/jazz, The Indigo is a ticket to some relaxing yet upbeat and positive music. Now let's hope they do something that'll earn them an opening theme for once.


 

Created using CDpedia