Posts Tagged j-pop

J-pop vs. Metal | 00002

DOOPEES 「What’s the Time? (Some Day, In Time) 」 ×
Helmet 「Role Model 」 ×
MEG 「DAYS 」 ×
Cynic 「Veil of Maya 」 ×
HALCALI 「Styly Styly 」 ×
Arsis 「Shattering the Spell 」×
Takako Minekawa 「Plash 」 ×
Napalm Death 「Pseudo Youth 」×
Shiina Ringo 「Poltergeist 」 ×
Korpiklanni 「Pixies Dance 」 ×
Tamurapan 「SOS 」 ×
Darkthrone 「The Dance of Enternal Shadows 」 ×
Pizzicato Five 「Y.O.U. ( I Wanna Be Like You) 」 ×

jpopvsmetal.com

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J-pop vs. Metal | 00001

 

 

Gojira 「Torii 」 ×
Namie Amuro 「Full Moon 」 ×
Meshuggah 「Future Breed Machine 」 ×
Perfume 「FAKE IT 」 ×
Sepultura feat. KODO 「Kamaitachi 」 ×
Utada Hikaru 「Kiss & Cry 」 ×
Shonen Knife 「Buddha’s Face 」 ×
Morning Musume 「Moonlight Night 〜月夜の晩だよ〜 」 ×
Anaal Nathrakh 「To Spite the Face 」 ×
Tanpopo 「Motto 」 ×
Atheist 「See You Again 」 ×

 

jpopvsmetal.com

 

 

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Since time immemorial, man has made introductory disclaimers to lists. Grand and authoritative, yet totally not a big deal, the introduction of a year end list discounting the importance, even complete futility of such lists, leading into the exact same type of list, is at this point in history, a refined art. But in making such a statement, I would be declaring my myself a master of such an art, which is something I would never want to be seen doing. Luckily no one reads these introductions.

  1. Best J-pop video

    Close enough.

  2. Best Albums I Did Not Buy

    Best album trailer. No real competition. Didn’t really listen to it. But am sure to be subjected to it plenty at terrible parties which are really, really terrible sober. But that’s my life. (Not really anymore.)

    • Swans – The Seer

      I am afraid of Swans. Some people say that but they have all the albums, like that guy who’s afraid of spiders but he has 6 aquariums of tarantulas in his bedroom. You know that guy? No you don’t. There’s no guy like that. The best you can do conquering a true fear is to not have a total breakdown in its presence. So I was able to deal with Swans in streaming form this year in limited amounts but that’s as good as it gets.

    • Namie Amuro – Uncontrolled

      This album I listened to a lot. I would have liked to buy it but can’t spend $40 on a CD right now. $30 has always been the upper limit. Of course, there’s a Namie page on iTunes right now but it only has a long bio that stops at 2005 and no music. That’s shitty. Even people that already like J-pop aren’t talking about stuff that is not available digitally somehow. (Also, everything is available digitally now…actually it’s been 10 years.) Most don’t even bother with piracy anymore; this CD-only stuff is becoming invisible. I sometimes justify the expense of J-CDs for the language learning value of having the official booklet and all but this album is mostly in English.

  3. There were some good J-pop videos for real tho, right?

    Yes, and Perfume ruled the year without putting an album together. And Kyary still rules when she’s not ripping off Tommy heavenly6. (Altho Tommy herself has gone off…that double album had some good stuff, but not really that memorable.) And there’s that group with only one song. You think Namie would have one in there but she never bothered to put out any full-length videos this year. Unless you’re supposed to buy them on DVD or something. That’s not happening. (She seems to not care all that much anymore in the videos anymore.) Can you blame her? Hardly anyone’s going to see them. She’s locked into a losing strategy.

    There was some other good stuff coming out of net-phobic Avex label: Koda Kumi’s Lay Down and Crystal Kay’s Delicious na Kinyoubi. Not especially great videos, but good songs, available, like the entire albums, on the internet. (For which Avex gets $0.) But neither album was close to Namie’s. (Available for $0 or $40, which will you choose?)

  4. Top 5 Albums of Significant Significance

    In the order I thought of them:

    Sigh, Gojira, Meshuggah, Melvins, Overkill and Killing Joke made really good albums but didn’t stand out as much as their last albums. And I just realized I bought the new Torche but didn’t listen to it yet. I bet I’m forgetting some other stuff.

  5. Top 5 Albums I bought on Bandcamp

    In the order I liked them:

  6. Best live shows

    So many great shows this year. I missed most of them. But I did manage to see some bands that I had missed in previous years so I feel like I’m caught up on the bare minimum of show attendance. The only way this changes in 2013 is if I can make more money or get a job as a roadie or something.

    • Motorhead/Megadeth@MSG

      So glad I saw Megadeth before Mustaine had that complete meltdown. Everything surrounding this show was more almost more enjoyable than the show itself tho, I had almost the worst seat at the back of the theater and the sound was terrible. But I got to check off several things off an imaginary list.

    • Ghost/Opeth/Mastodon@Electric Factory

      This place has great sound. Swore off going here for years, I’m dumb. It’s not bad in general, it’s not even that big a place. I think the last show I saw there before this I was actually psychically smaller, I had this memory of this large, impersonal space. Weird. Ghost and Opeth put on good tho subdued shows, and Mastodon was so great. Getting up front for that is like the most I’ve felt at home at a show in a while, even tho I had to take off my glasses and couldn’t barely even see anything except lasers most of the show. Sounded way better than any live recording I’ve heard of them or any video out there, vox too. (I could have just been like, enjoying myself.) Parking situation sucks tho.

    • Converge@Union Transfer

      This new venue is amazing. Those old Philly punk venues are going to seem more special for their use of odd rundown spaces (This space is also repurposed, but it seems new. They actually fixed it up.), but this place has a real sound system. Which is nice if you like music. Oh, Converge is amazing live, too.

    • Decibel Tour@The Troc

      I talked about this already. All these bands were great. They couldn’t really do the blood thing cause it’s Philly, which is fine by me. Behemoth I did not realize how much they use backing tracks, don’t think I mentioned that. They’re almost like an industrial band.

  7. Best list

    Personal fave: Magnetar SGR 1806-20

  8. Best Mix

    the_e | Japanese_e Dozen (Dirte_e Dozen Mix 08/12)

    J-rap has not done too well lately; even the big name singers and bands are getting crushed by the idol machine. This is great mix of ‘real’ hip-hop into dance stuff and then classic pop. There’s even a cover of an anime song. But all almost seamless, some amazing segues.

  9. Best comic-based pop music history series

    Semi-related: How sad is it that people don’t get that Gangnam Style is a modified version of the Apache dance which Will Smith did not invent? Teach your damn kids.

  10. Best video-based pop music history & meta-criticism

    Chris Ott, Shallow Rewards, obvs. He’s not into J-pop or Metal very much of course. There’s more to life tho, c’mon, vast audience.

So I got a lot of stuff straightened out now so I’m going to be reviewing a lot of records but it’s almost completely out of a nervous compulsion to keep following through with a project. I think I’ve learned some organizational skills I can apply to other stuff, maybe even to jobs that still exist in America. Haha, just kidding. Happy New Year, suckers! %

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Top 10 Hello! Project Songs 1997-2005

A few posts ago I stated irritatingly punctuated J-pop mega-entity Hello! Project puts out about 100 songs a year. Since I made this statement on the internet and no one corrected me, it must be true. And yet, it’s more like a number I just pulled out of my ass. There’s no easy way out of this paradox. It’s going to involve…counting. Yes, no one else has counted the number of songs these people have put out each year. Worse than that, no else has made a list of just the songs for each year. I will have to look up each release and…count the songs. Because records are not episodes of long-cancelled tv shows, wikipedia is not always a help here. Luckily I’ve found a new independent fan wiki (and others) to help with this pointless task.

[NOTE: I’m only counting original songs, not covers, “album versions”, remixes or re-releases (lotta those). Permission to double-check: granted. Just keep in mind this is not an exact science and also that life is worth living. Gambatte.]


97: MH: 2 MM: 1 = 3
98: MH:15 MM:14 TP:2 YN:6 = 29
99: CN:2 CT:4 MH:4 MM:14 PM:2 TC:6 TP:11 YN:2 = 45
00: CN:1 CT:4 MH:5 MK:4 MM:14 NA: 1 PM:2 SD:2 SG:4 TC:2 TP:4 YM:2 YN:2 47
01: AM:8 CN:2 CT:5 MG:3 MH:4 MK:4 MM:5 mm:9 PM:4 SD:5 SG:5 TP:4 YM:2 YN:4 = 64
02: AM:13 CT:3 GM:1 MG:8 MH:2 MM:17 mm:16 MF:8 MK:6 PM:3 TP:2 SG:4 YN:2 YM:2 = 87
03: AA:2 AM:13 CT:4 RM:2 OA:2 PM:1 MF:7 MG:10 MK:13 MM:14 mm:23 MO:2 SG:4 YM:2 YN:3ZYX:2 = 104
04: AM:15 BK:16 CT:2 EM:1 KI:14 MG:10 MK:14 MM:14 mm:5 MO:1 MS:1 NA:11 NN:2 NR:1 SG:3 UU:4 VU:2 YM:4 YN:7 = 124
05: AM:9 BK:14 DD:1 KI:10 MG:11 MM:8 NA:4 SG:3 UU:11 VU:18 = 91

AA: Aa! | AM: Aya Matsuura | BK: Berryz Koubou | CT: Country Musume| CN: Coconuts Musume | DD: DEF.DIVA | EM: Ecomoni | GM: Gomattou | KI: Kaori Iida | MF: Miki Fujmoto | MG: Maki Goto | MH: Michiyo Heike | MK: Melon Kinenbi | NA: Natsumi Abe | MM: Morning Musume | mm: MiniMoni/MiniHams | MO: MM Otomegumi | MS: MM Sakuragumi | NN: Nochiura Natsumi | NR: Natsumi Abe & Rika Ishikawa | OA: Okeisan & Abe Natsumi | PM: Pucchimoni | RM: Romans | SD: Sheki Dol | SG: [shuffle groups] | TC: Taiyo & Ciscomoon/T&C Bomber | TP: Tanpopo | UU: W | VU: v-u-den | YM: Yuki Maeda | YN: Yuko Nakazawa | ZYX: ZYX


That all took at least 5 hours. But I was kinda right, so, clearly, I’m not wasting my life here.

Anyway, we can see that things started off simply for the H!P but by 2005 it was out of control. And this was before °C-ute, S/Mileage and a number of groups with meaningless mathematically notated names. These groups made a lot of songs and many were great or at least catchy and/or “fun”. Were some of these songs terrible? You bet. Saying that every H!P song is great isn’t just drinking the Kool-aid, it’s trying to eat the paper cup. No matter how much you like Kool-aid the entire package is not digestible.

Now, I like the early stuff. It’s kinda cheesy, kinda wrong…whatever. It hits the right notes emotionally, if not technically. Before the dawn of autotune, voice lessons and the better singers that would eventually come (and leave) H!P, it was an enjoyable but quaint operation. But what the group is rightfully known for is batshit maximalism. This didn’t really happen until their 8th single LOVE Machine in 1999 and to lesser extent the followup Koi no Dance Site in early 2000.

So that knocks of a couple years. I’m also knocking off those two songs cause everybody reading this already knows them (I just linked to them). And the videos are pretty bad, right? Worse than dated, they seem like they’re ten years older than they are. The success of these songs is what got them the budget for their best videos. The video shouldn’t count, but something’s gotta count. Out of a total of 594 songs I can only pick 10. Also this is the internet. It’s a blog post. I’m gonna post the videos. But I tried not to let it sway me too much. Joshi Kashimashi Monogatari, for example, is hard to defend as a song.

A lot of songs by the other groups hold up tho. Tanpopo, Pucchi Moni and the Otome/Sakuragumi splinter groups did some of my favorite songs. But were those songs better than Momusu’s Big Singles? I have to say no. Because I already made the list and I can’t spend anymore time on this. It’s killing me. Literally. Halfway through counting the 2004 singles they had to attach an IV. They’re real nice to me here. But understandably worried. I worry more about them; I suspect they’re starting to take AKB48 seriously. Even the thought is unbearable.

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If you’re looking to buy, all of the songs below are on the very nicely packaged ALL SINGLES COMPLETE double disc. If you’re looking to explore beyond that into the other groups you want the “Petit Best” comps.

But that way lies madness. And some good songs. But now, I present to you:

The Top 10 Hello! Project Songs from 1999-2005 which are all Morning Musume Songs but not Love Machine or Koi no Dance Site Because That’s Too Easy and the Videos are Not Very Good and This Is the Internet, But Let’s Stick to The Songs That Are Actually Good Songs, In Alphabetical Order:

  1. “AS FOR ONE DAY” [2003]

  2. “Do it! Now” [2002]


    “Koko ni Iruzee!”

  3. “Iroppoi Jirettai” [2005]

  4. “Osaka Koi no Uta” [2005]

  5. “Ren’ai Revolution 21” [2000]


    Read the rest of this entry »

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Maki Nomiya 30th Anniversary

Oh man, remember that Ustream of that promotional event from months ago for the real live event that already happened and you had no chance of attending anyway? Man…those were the days. That’s not happening again. (Because they took the video down.)

I guess I assumed they were bluffing about taking the video down. I didn’t try to figure out anyway to download it or take an audiograb. I took some screencaps, but figured I would go back later and get better ones. That didn’t work out. So I got all my mediocre screencaps and tried giving them captions, but the text started wrapping around all wrong. Attempting to fix it gave me this amusing overlap glitch which only got worse/more amusing. It would be more appropriate if it reminded me of unpredictably overlapping blogs of my youth but sometimes you’ve just got to grit your teeth and deal with something new happening. Here’s the whole mess:
















So that was weird.

My main thought on this is that it contrasts pretty strongly with the attitude of Shonen Knife’s (really Naoko Yamano’s) 30th anniversary. That was more a celebration than a retrospective; the focus is really on the newest or newish material, with a few old songs (in the updated style) thrown in. It’s undoubtedly the healthier attitude to have as an artist still intending to continue putting out new work.

Both SK & P5 (with Maki) peaked around the same time in the mid-90s when they both crossed over onto major labels in America. Any live performance has to include something from that period. But Maki includes almost no post-peak P5 and not anything from her post-P5 solo albums—that’s four full LPs and change. I guess those albums didn’t sell that well, but neither did her early stuff, right?

I remember the original press for P5 and Maki was marketed as an ex-model, not an established singer for other groups. This whole thing stressing her early career seems revisionist. It’s probably more accurate, her modeling career is now relatively a blip. I was never impressed with that first album, and I never heard the songs of the old groups. They sound pretty good here, I gotta go back and check that stuff out for the songs. Thing is, she was a great singer for P5 and still sounds great, but she wasn’t great early on. Her voice was not there yet. Still, this is good for J-pop history to acknowledge that stuff and if the songs are good, I’m in. It’s similar to pre-Maki P5 in that it’s not quite the thing yet, but the ideas are there.

Still, a lotta time is spent down on the furthest part of Memory Lane. Maybe in another 10 years she’ll come around to her newer (now 10 year old) stuff.

Konishi Yasuharu makes no appearance, of course. Even tho he did do some production on those solo albums so I assume they’re on good terms I suppose performing live together would make it a P5 reunion gig, which he’s probably against. And he’s busy making songs with SMAP…ugh. Two talents going to waste there. I’m not saying that SMAP is so terrible and that covering your old songs is so sad, but it’s kinda terrible and a little sad. After a point.

Anyway, Tokyo’s Coolest Sound has a write-up of the concert itself. You can get most of the info about the musical guests there, except Miyavi didn’t show up. It sounds like it might have been a lot different.And they did this thing where you’re watching her watch old clips of herself. The whole thing was kinda creepy cause there’s a live audience in the studio but it’s only the event staff of like a dozen people. It had a weird tension to it. It’s like a new kind of live event they haven’t quite figured out to feel natural yet. It’s almost like they televised a dress rehearsal, but you’ve got the screen with the chatroom there, that’s like a New Aesthetic vibe. It’s weird, it’s like the acoustics are wrong or something when you just hear a few people clapping. The energy is wrong. Also, she started out with a house version of The Night is Still Young before the guests show up and she is just not that kind of diva. That never really worked for her did it? They tried to push that on some of the records but she’s just a pop singer, she’s not like Lady Miss Keir or something. Nothing against her, it’s just an energy mismatch thing. Really set the tone. The actual performances were good, I should have taken notes as I was capping. I think the old guy is the Pink no Kokoro producer. Is the guy in shorts Bravo? I can’t tell. That’s him is the fuzzy old VCR footage with the cheerleaders. I never saw P5 in concert, I guess it was always a weird thing.

The wait for an encore might be the most awkward I’ve ever felt watching a recorded event on the internet. A dozen people, tops, clapping in pre-planned unison while the chatroom goes berserk. This goes on for a solid 5 minutes at least. Creep city. Not necessary.

[OK, so apparently the Self-Covers album has all the versions of the songs as performed here so I should probably just get that.]


She’s pointing at MEEEEE. Oh! Uh…great show, Miss Maki. So…that’s all I have to say about that.
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