13 August 2013

Eri Kitamura - Birth

Kamisama no Inai Nichijoubi OP

Tracklist:

1. Birth
2. Lifetime Trader
3. Birth (Off Vocal Ver.)
4. Lifetime Trader (Off Vocal Ver.)

1. Birth

A haunting, deep intro sets the ground for church bells and chanting in English, very similar to Kalafina, before suddenly stopping and unraveling into a heavy rock section. Although the verse starts off with just a piano and Eri's unusually silent voice, the arrangement kicks in with almost metal-like distorted guitars and dreamy chanting, which is spread across the whole track, creating little interludes. Characteristically for her A-side songs, we get a catchy ani-rock chorus again, except the violin is a little less noticeable and involved this time, without strong grinding of it like in re;story, which transitions to the middle eight section completely devoted to the choir and building up with an effective, strong guitar solo. I'm quite glad she's following through with her initial stance and keeps releasing somewhat heavier, more rock-oriented music than most of her colleagues. 
Rating: 9

2. Lifetime Trader

Lifetime Trader takes in the ambient from Birth's introduction, except it's much more subtle and surreal, mixed with bells and creating something that sounds like an old Final Fantasy soundtrack piece, which is ruined interrupted by Eri's whispering and turns into an upbeat rock track. Perhaps for the first time, she is intentionally trying to make her colour similar to LiSA's, but it only makes her sound a bit silly and amateurish, especially when coupled with unnecessary male shouts as to give weight to her vocals which are already giving out. Not only is her voice a copy, but the whole melody and chord progression as well, being an obvious Frankenstein-like compound of the songs Veronica and LOVE&HATE from her debut album. A very strong, headbang-worthy middle eight sequence makes me feel even more sorry for the excellent instrumentation which could have been used in many different ways to make this track better.
Rating: 6

It may seem that her title tracks are still infallible, but the composing effort is showing signs of tiredness from following the same formula over and over again, as we get to see in Lifetime Trader. Playing the occasional card of LiSA-like rock is not bad, but the impression takes a toll if it's badly done. My overall rating is: 7 ½.

The comment box doesn't bite; be careful when feeding it, though.

2 comments:

  1. Lifetime Traders has actually grown on me (a little) since I reviewed it. But her voice is still NOOOO. Birth is still awesome :-)
    Love how she incorporates hard rock/metal into her anison.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've listened to this single for a week now, and it still hasn't grown on me. It just feels too similar ~

      Delete

13 August 2013

Eri Kitamura - Birth

Kamisama no Inai Nichijoubi OP

Tracklist:

1. Birth
2. Lifetime Trader
3. Birth (Off Vocal Ver.)
4. Lifetime Trader (Off Vocal Ver.)

1. Birth

A haunting, deep intro sets the ground for church bells and chanting in English, very similar to Kalafina, before suddenly stopping and unraveling into a heavy rock section. Although the verse starts off with just a piano and Eri's unusually silent voice, the arrangement kicks in with almost metal-like distorted guitars and dreamy chanting, which is spread across the whole track, creating little interludes. Characteristically for her A-side songs, we get a catchy ani-rock chorus again, except the violin is a little less noticeable and involved this time, without strong grinding of it like in re;story, which transitions to the middle eight section completely devoted to the choir and building up with an effective, strong guitar solo. I'm quite glad she's following through with her initial stance and keeps releasing somewhat heavier, more rock-oriented music than most of her colleagues. 
Rating: 9

2. Lifetime Trader

Lifetime Trader takes in the ambient from Birth's introduction, except it's much more subtle and surreal, mixed with bells and creating something that sounds like an old Final Fantasy soundtrack piece, which is ruined interrupted by Eri's whispering and turns into an upbeat rock track. Perhaps for the first time, she is intentionally trying to make her colour similar to LiSA's, but it only makes her sound a bit silly and amateurish, especially when coupled with unnecessary male shouts as to give weight to her vocals which are already giving out. Not only is her voice a copy, but the whole melody and chord progression as well, being an obvious Frankenstein-like compound of the songs Veronica and LOVE&HATE from her debut album. A very strong, headbang-worthy middle eight sequence makes me feel even more sorry for the excellent instrumentation which could have been used in many different ways to make this track better.
Rating: 6

It may seem that her title tracks are still infallible, but the composing effort is showing signs of tiredness from following the same formula over and over again, as we get to see in Lifetime Trader. Playing the occasional card of LiSA-like rock is not bad, but the impression takes a toll if it's badly done. My overall rating is: 7 ½.

The comment box doesn't bite; be careful when feeding it, though.

2 comments:

  1. Lifetime Traders has actually grown on me (a little) since I reviewed it. But her voice is still NOOOO. Birth is still awesome :-)
    Love how she incorporates hard rock/metal into her anison.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've listened to this single for a week now, and it still hasn't grown on me. It just feels too similar ~

      Delete