Stand Alone
Stand Alone
ASIN: B000AL72UU
Track Listings
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1. I've Got Loving on my Mind
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2. Runaway
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3. Till It's Closing Time
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4. Heat of Your Body
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5. Stand Alone
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6. She's A Dancing Queen
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7. Storm Brewing
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8. Without Love
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9. So Easy
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10. Next Year
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11. Christmas Day
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Editorial Reviews
About the Artist
There's a common thread running through the music of Allen, Moss, Walters and Webb. And although the songs on this CD are all original tunes, they might just take you back a few years. Their unique fusion of light rock, country and blues recalls the sounds of the '70's- infused with the energy and magic of a live performance. The members of Allen, Moss, Walters and Webb have been performing together for twenty years. Over time, the band has developed a style reminiscent of the early Eagles, or of Pure Prairie League. In reality, Allen, Moss, Walters and Webb is pure talent- a seasoned quartet that still allows its individual members to shine.
Product Description
There's a common thread running through the music of Allen, Moss, Walters and Webb. And although the songs on this CD are all original tunes, they might just take you back a few years. Their unique fusion of light rock, country and blues recalls the sounds of the '70's- infused with the energy and magic of a live performance. The members of Allen, Moss, Walters and Webb have been performing together for twenty years. Over time, the band has developed a style reminiscent of the early Eagles, or of Pure Prairie League. In reality, Allen, Moss, Walters and Webb is pure talent- a seasoned quartet that still allows its individual members to shine.
Stand Alone,Moss, Walters & Webb Allen,ROZO Music,Country,Pop,Rock
Average customer rating:
- Good CD
- THE SONGS ARE GOOD BUT NOT ON THIS UNCLEAR CD !
- I like the album starting from Inner Universe...
- Hmmm...
- Great mix of styles.
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Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
Yoko Kanno
Manufacturer: Bandai
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Movie Soundtracks
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
General
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
Anime & Video Game Soundtracks
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 2
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Be Human
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, 2nd GIG, Volume 01 (Special Edition)
- Samurai Champloo Original Soundtrack
- Cowboy Bebop
ASIN: B00020VZVQ
Release Date: 2004-11-09 |
Tracks:
- Run Rabbit Junk
- Yakitori
- Stamina Rose
- Surf
- Where Does This Ocean Go?
- Train Search
- Siberian Doll House
- Velveteen
- Lithium Flower
- Home Stay
- Inner Universe
- Fish - Silent Cruise
- Some Other Time
- Beauty Is Within Us
- We're the Great
- Monochrome
- GET9 [TV Size]
- Rise [TV Size]
Customer Reviews:
Good CD.......2007-03-17
I bought this CD, becouse i would like to hear the OST soundtrack, and i think it was a good option. very good shipping and fast deliver...
THE SONGS ARE GOOD BUT NOT ON THIS UNCLEAR CD !.......2007-01-25
IT COULD BE A BOOTLEG IT WAS UN-CLEAR SOUNDING BUT I GOT IT HERE SO BE CAREFUL !
I like the album starting from Inner Universe..........2007-01-07
I bought this album for track 11 "Inner Universe"
(which is the track from the opening sequence of the tv show),
and I would buy the album for this one track alone.
As for the rest of the album, I really wanted to like it but
the only songs I found that were good enough to stand on their own
are track 11 "Inner Universe" and track 18 "Rise [TV Size]".
If you want some albums where you can listen to the
entire album (without editing out more than half the album)
I would recommend "Cowboy Bebop" and "Cowboy Bebop: Blue";
they are both much better than this album.
Hmmm..........2007-01-06
Well, the second half of this CD is great. From "Inner Universe" on. Maybe it's not quite half. "Beauty is Within Us" is a particularly moving track. Especially when you listen closely or read the lyrics.
Great mix of styles........2006-11-14
From Heavy Metal to Bjorkesque electronica via the classics and jazz, this is a Japanese album that blends together some of the best ideas from western music into 50 minutes of listening adventure.
Average customer rating:
- Amazing!
- More great music by Yoko Kano
- Most Beautiful and Amazing
- I Need Stand Alone Complex OST 3
- Toccante
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Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 2
Yoko Kanno
Manufacturer: Bandai
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Japan
| Far East & Asia
| International
| Styles
| Music
General
| New Age
| Styles
| Music
Electronica
| Dance & DJ
| Styles
| Music
Movie Soundtracks
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
General
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Be Human
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, 2nd GIG, Volume 06 (Episodes 21-23)
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, 2nd GIG, Volume 04 (Episodes 13-16)
- Wolf's Rain
ASIN: B0009KQOUQ
Release Date: 2005-08-23 |
Tracks:
- Cyberbird
- Rise
- Ride on Technology
- Idoling
- I Can't Be Cool
- 3Tops
- Gonna Rice
- Get9 - Jillmax, Yoko Kanno
- Go da Da
- Psychedelic Soul
- What's It For
- Living Inside the Shell
- Pet Food
- Security Off
- To Tell the Truth
- I Do
- We Can't Be Cool
Description
From the popular series, "Ghost in the Shell: A Stand Alone Complex" arrives the original scores from the 2nd Season. Renowned composer, Yoko Kanno once again blends a magnificent array of stylish jazz, bouncing techno, thunderous rock and smooth ballads that only she can accomplish. 17 breathtaking tracks from the hit T.V. series aired on Cartoon Network. Song lyrics included in the CD insert. Genre Anime-CD Sountrack
Customer Reviews:
Amazing!.......2007-05-21
I don't drive anywhere without this album in my car. Yoko Kanno has taken her place at the top of my list of favorite composers. Her versatility blows me away. This soundtrack contains a great mixture of music types that stands well on its own besides working so well into the fabric of Ghost in the Shell: SAC. I have to say that the show just wouldn't be as good without her contributions.
More great music by Yoko Kano.......2007-02-12
More great music by Yoko Kano. I think this was even better that the 1st volume.
Most Beautiful and Amazing.......2007-02-08
Another soundtrack by yoko kanno and beautiful doesn't do it justice. I have several favorites from the score but to really know how amazing and joyous it is, it should be heard. I don't think words can describe it.
I Need Stand Alone Complex OST 3.......2006-11-12
Okay, I thought the first OST was amazing so I assumed OST 2 would let me down. Boy was I wrong! Not only do you get full versions of Rise and Get 9, but you are also gifted with two tracks sung by Ilaria Graziano (I Can't Be Cool and I Do).
But let me back up a bit. I knew I would love this OST more than the first one when I slipped it into the CD player in my car and Cyberbird almost ruptured my eardrums. Unbeknownst to me, the volume was up too high and I didn't turn it down until a cop looked at me funny. I think he liked what he heard but was afraid to admit it.
There are seventeen tracks. Each one is different. From techno to electronica to jazz to pop to funk to a lovely ballad titled I Do. There's a little bit of everything, which is just the way I like my music. If you own Vol. 1 you should add this one to your collection.
Amazon - Is there any chance you'll be selling Vol. 3? Pretty please?
Toccante.......2006-11-03
È assolutamente incredibile come l'autore di questa colonna sonora sia riuscito a dare vita a generi così diversi l'uno dall'altro, in grado di emettere, ad ogni brano, sensazioni forti e ogni volta nuove. Molto interessante, come per il primo CD, che si sia fatto uso di non solo inglese, ma anche altre lingue, ognuna in grado di dare un timbro del tutto particolare ad ogni pezzo. Degno di nota e del tutto inaspettato il risultato ottenuto con la miscela di italiano ed inglese di "I can't be cool".
Un solo giudizio: da comprare subito, sia per gli amanti delle colonne sonore che non.
Average customer rating:
- This is the best new CD I've heard in a long time
- Jack Elliot in Classic Form
- Old Jack
- Music to Grin by
- Folk Music
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I Stand Alone
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Manufacturer: Anti
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Traditional Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Kerouac's Last Dream
- The Essential Ramblin' Jack Elliott
- Workbench Songs
- This Old Road
- Adieu False Heart
ASIN: B000FMGTXA
Release Date: 2006-07-11 |
Tracks:
- Engine 143
- Arthritis Blues
- Old Blue
- Driving Nails In My Coffin
- Rake & Ramblin' Boy
- Hong Kong Blues
- Jean Harlow
- Call Me A Dog
- Careless Darling
- Mr. Garfield
- My Old Dog & Me
- Leaving Cheyenne
- Remember Me
- Willy Moore
- Honey, Where You Been So Long
- Woody's Last Ride
Amazon.com
They don't call him Ramblin' Jack because he travels around a lot, and they don't call him the Last Brooklyn Cowboy because he croons like his hero Gene Autry. You can't really acquire a taste for Elliott's briny, staggering voice--you just have to surrender to the persona. In his 75th year, that persona is in fine, witty, playful form. He laughs out loud at the lines "Now when I die, don't bury me at all / Just place me away in alcohol / My .44 put by my feet / Tell everyone I'm just asleep" and jokes with his physician on "Arthritis Blues" ("Doctor, doctor, get your X-ray machine / Feels so good, just about like morphine"). Turns out his guitar chops are tougher than his rheumatism: he bangs away at his acoustic like the last one-man band standing at the all-night hootenanny, though when a rare accompanist shares the spotlight--as do David Hidalgo on accordion, Nels Cline on Dobro, Flea on bass, DJ Bonebrake on drums, and Lucinda Williams and Corin Tucker on harmony vocals--the effect is like a cool chaser to his rotgut whiskey drawl. These dog songs, train songs, love songs, fleetingly remembered songs, and one original (the brief monologue "Woody's Last Ride") have been with him forever; they're funny even when tragic, soulful even when they turn tunefulness upside down. --Roy Kasten
Album Description
Bob Dylan called him his "long lost father". He's a living link to Woody Guthrie, Brownie McGhee, and the beat poets. Mick Jagger, Lou Reed, Van Morrison, Paul McCartney, Kris Kristoffersen, Bruce Springsteen, and Beck all cite him as an inspiration. Now more than ever, Elliott stands alone, a crucial reminder of a proud and dying American tradition - a self-made wayfarer whose fifty-plus years of experience resonate in every note he sings. This is the most intimate recording of his career, cradled by a family of guests that include Lucinda Williams, David Hidalgo, Flea, Corin Tucker of Sleater-Kinney, and Wilco guitarist Nels Cline. Elliott offers an introspective look back at his career, through meditative takes on favorites and untried material. At 74, he still has plenty of hunt left in him.
Customer Reviews:
This is the best new CD I've heard in a long time.......2007-06-16
This is my introduction to Ramblin' Jack Elliott and it is everything I'm looking for in a new album. During my 4th listening I became completely overcome with emotion, cried even. I'm embarrassed that it has taken me so long to check his stuff out. He's my new favorite artist.
Jack Elliot in Classic Form.......2007-02-03
Few artists could get away with boldly proclaiming "I Stand Alone" as Ramblin' Jack Elliot does on this release. All it takes is one listen to validate that he does stand alone, in song selection, delivery and musicianship. This album is refreshing because one finds a lot of overlap on his other releases--Jack Elliot standards like "1913 Massacre", "Solider's Last Letter", "Buffalo Skinners", etc.--and for good reason, they are all wonderful songs that he has made his own through his many years of playing them. But what sets this album, apart, for me, are the new songs Jack gives us that we haven't heard before. "Ol' Blue", for example, is in my opinion arguably one of the most beautiful songs he has ever recorded, and showcases Cisco Houston's talents as a songwriter. Other standouts include "Mr. Garfield", "Hong Kong Blues" and "My Old Dog & Me". And though he includes some of his favorites that he has recorded before, they are also some of his best - relatively obscure songs like "Arthritis Blues" and "Rake and Ramblin' Boy". Rounding everything out are some country-western classics that veer from Elliot's roots leanings, particularly "Driving Nails in My Coffin", "Careless Darling" and "Remember Me". The fact that Elliot's daughter Ilyana urged him to make this album is a nice footnote to another sweet release by a true master.
Old Jack.......2007-01-16
This is a sweet and melancholy CD from an older Jack Elliot, same great voice, great energy, singing about old man things.
Music to Grin by.......2007-01-05
Last night sitting at the kitchen table sipping some fine whiskey, I listened to this album for the first time. Had been a long time since I grinned through an entire CD. Jack Elliot has got it.
The kids wondered what this weird music was I was listening to, but they sat down and enjoyed the songs also.
Good stuff.
Folk Music.......2007-01-04
Jack shows his considerable skill in guitar and finds the the poetry of life in music form. Great feeling in this volume. I think it is also a pretty good meditation upon his life(or yours.
Average customer rating:
- Easy Listening
- Agnetha Faltskog is the best!
- Well worth buying
- + ½ star. Agnetha's best solo album of the 80s.
- Pack the bags kids, Mummaýs going to Malibu!
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I Stand Alone
Agnetha Faltskog
Manufacturer: Wea International
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
General
| Euro Pop
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Dance Pop
| Dance & DJ
| Styles
| Music
Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Eyes of a Woman
- Agnetha Faltskog - That's Me: Greatest Hits
- Wrap Your Arms Around Me
- My Colouring Book
- Wrap Your Arms Around Me
ASIN: B000006YMN
Release Date: 1993-04-21 |
Tracks:
- Last Time
- Little White Secrets
- I Wasn't the One (Who Said Goodbye) - Peter Cetera, Agnetha Faltskog
- Love in a World Gone Mad
- Maybe It Was Magic
- Let It Shine
- We Got a Way
- I Stand Alone
- Are You Gonna Throw It All Away
- If You Need Somebody Tonight
Album Details
The Former Abba Superstar's Last Attempt to Crack Open the Pop Market for Herself was a Bold Move, Using One of the Hottest Stars of the Moment (Former Chicago Lead Singer Peter Cetera) to Help her Craft an Album that Would Best Present her Artistic Vision. While the Duet with Cetera "i Wasn't the One" Got Some Airplay on the Ac Circuit, it Didn't Ever Catch Fire.
Customer Reviews:
Easy Listening.......2006-08-24
I've always been a fan of Abba and when the band disbanded, although sorry, I was interested to see what happened next. Agnetha Faltskog is brilliant in I stand Alone there isn't a song on the album that I don't like and I never get bored of listening to it. its just a great addition to anyone's music collection.
Agnetha Faltskog is the best!.......2004-10-14
Agnetha Faltskog is the best!
What more is there to say?
Her voice us great, and her choice of songs is even better.
Well worth buying.......2004-04-20
She has such an amazing voice! I had the cassette tape of this years ago and lost it. I plan on buying the CD soon! Every song is fantastic! Well worth buying! I'm surprised it didn't do well nationwide.
+ ½ star. Agnetha's best solo album of the 80s........2003-11-10
After the lackluster Eyes Of A Woman album, I Stand Alone was a much better album and more homogenous, and Agnetha's new looks were stunning! Agnetha recorded this with Chicago's Peter Cetera, and this could have been huge - really huge - had Agnetha not been so reluctant to promote it. It was heralded by a bomb of a single, The Last Time, that should have been a hit, and there were several other songs with great hooks: Let It Shine for one, but also Little White Secrets and the title track I Stand Alone. The sound is warm, the production slick and laid-back but perhaps also a bit bland, although Agnetha tried to add some edge with the rocky We Got A Way. It's nowhere as awful as Save Me (from the Eyes Of A Woman LP) but it's one of those 80s rock tracks that haven't aged very well. The other tracks are mostly ballads, including a duet with Peter Cetera, I Wasn't The One Who Said Goodbye (also recorded in Spanish as Yo No Fui Quien Dijo Adiós), that are pleasant enough but not particularly interesting. I don't think the album is as strong today as I thought back then but it is enjoyable, and I award I Stand Alone 3½ stars in total for some nice 80s nostalgia.
Pack the bags kids, Mummaýs going to Malibu!.......2003-01-14
Whatever convinced Agnetha to break her no-travelling rule and fly to Malibu, California to record this, her third English solo record, was nothing short of a miracle. With the help of Chicago frontman Peter Cetera, self-confessed recluse and media shy Agnetha produced the strongest record of her career.
From the slightly dark lead single `The Last Time' to the bubbly `Let It Shine', Agnetha gives her all in some stellar performances. The ballad `Maybe It Was Magic' is perhaps the best solo recording of her career, `We Got A Way' is `Beach-Boys-in-the-eighties' surf and sun, whilst `I Stand Alone' is a Roxette-eque mid-tempo about feminism (!) Add in a couple of Diane Warren ballads and gorgeous pop tunes like `Little White Secrets' and you have a rather well-rounded record.
My favourite song has to be the criminally underrated `I Wasn't The One (Who Said Goodbye)', a duet with Cetera which went largely unnoticed when released as a single. A shame, because it's pop power ballad brilliance, on par with Cetera's duet with Cher `After All' at around the same time. Perhaps the success of the latter overshadowed the Agnetha collaboration? In any case, `I Stand Alone' remains Agnetha's strongest and most engaging solo release to date. It has a very Californian pop feel to it which works wonders with Faltskog's sweet, unaffected vocal style. Add to that, the gorgeous album photos which see Agnetha with lengthy spiked hair and black leather pants! I can give or take her debut release, and `Eyes Of A Woman' is quite a strong set, but if you feel the desire to purchase one of Agnetha's three English studio albums this is definitely the wisest purchase.
Average customer rating:
- Several diamonds in the rough
- My favourite GHOST IN THE SHELL: SAC soundtrack...
- I'd have lots of friends, and I'd stay out too late...
- A Fantastic Album!
- Being Human is the Condition
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Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Be Human
Yoko Kanno
Manufacturer: Bandai
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Movie Soundtracks
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
General
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
Anime & Video Game Soundtracks
| Soundtracks
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 2
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
- Wolf's Rain
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 3
- Wolf's Rain Original Soundtrack 2
ASIN: B0002YLDPK
Release Date: 2004-11-09 |
Tracks:
- Be Human
- Trip City
- Patch Me
- Tachikoma No Iede (Runaway Tachikoma)
- Osanpo Tachikoma (Tachikoma Out for a Walk)
- Bang Bang Banquet
- Fax Me
- Rocky Wa Doko? (Where's Rocky?)
- Spotter
- Let's Oil
- Cream
- Spider Bites
- Good by My Master
- Piece by Ten
- What Can I Say?
Customer Reviews:
Several diamonds in the rough.......2007-01-20
I consider myself an "anime listener"; I don't really have time to watch anime series, but I seek out and listen to the good soundtracks. So I'm reviewing this album just based on the music, not how it connects to Stand Alone Complex, because I don't even know what the plot of the series is.
Unlike the other Ghost in the Shell OSTs, be Human doesn't really hold together as an album. I wouldn't often listen to it from start to finish. But despite this, it has individual tracks that stand out and make me say "wow" more than on its sister albums.
The most notable of these is "Rocky wa Doko?". It's got a beautiful, poignant, flowing melody, and it works in a reference to the song "Daisy" in a way that fits perfectly with the middle section. With the album's theme of robots trying to be human, I have to wonder if this is an intentional reference to Hal's death scene in 2001.
The CD gets off to a slow start with "Be Human", but it does establish the theme for the album. The hard-rocking second track, "Trip City", is worth the wait. The chorus, in particular, is worthy of some serious rocking out.
"FAX me" is perhaps difficult to appreciate at first. You may wonder why you're listening to a fax machine over some classical music. But the music is original Kanno, and the fax machine is an integral part of it. It's a concerto for string quartet and fax machine, and it works.
"Cream" is R&B the Yoko Kanno way. Not something I thought I'd like, but egad does that melody get stuck in my head. The broken guitar chords and the way they weave into the wordless female vocals are what make this track.
"Good By My Master" is a powerful bit of choral soundtrack, and it pretty much rounds out the section of the album I'd actively listen to. Some other good tracks I've passed over are the eccentric and fun "Tachikoma no Iede", the catchy Latin jazz of "bang bang banquet", and the driving orchestral "Spotter".
The end of the album is filled out with a bunch of very short tracks, and I don't see the point of them. They may mean something to fans of the anime. To me, they mean that the album needed to be padded out to 45 minutes. So while I'll listen to the other Stand Alone Complex albums as albums, here I pick and choose the tracks I like and shuffle them into my playlist. But hey, those are some good tracks.
My favourite GHOST IN THE SHELL: SAC soundtrack..........2006-05-08
This is perhaps the least loved of all the Ghost In The Shell: Stand Alone Complex OSTs... But I personally think it's the best of them all and the most underrated... But then again, I'm a full-fledged YK fan and may be just talking way over my head...
1. "BE HUMAN" - I like Scott Matthew's voice... His deep and melancholy voice seems to fit very much on those sad songs--even how lively the music is... If I were to rank this song against his other GITS songs, I'd place it behind "Psychedelic Soul" (OST 2, track 10) and "Dear John" (OST 3, track 13)... Nontheless, I love the lyrics and it really helps to bring the song out more... And found it quite catchy to sing the song out of the blue...
2. "TRIP CITY" - Not the best GITS songs sure, but it sure is a heck fun to listen to... It's a lively piece that again showcases Scott Matthew's voice but in a different light--it's not a sad song at all (compared to most of his YK songs like Cowboy Bebop's "Is It Real?" or "Psychedelic Soul")... I personally prefer the second half of the song especially when Scott Matthew sings "Trip City" over and over...
3. "PATCH ME" - One of the techno style tracks for the series... I personally don't find to listen to this track most of the time... But I definitely don't skip on listening to it on random... Hey, it's just fun to listen to... I like when that harp suddenly plays before the end...
4. "TACHIKOMA NO IEDE" - One of the cutest and best tracks in this OST... The interluding piano, fiddle, and flute is just a joy to listen to... You'll definitely notice this nifty number find yourself listening to it over and over... (At least I hope)
5. "OSANPO TACHIKOMA" - Cute... Kinda sad... Kinda off-beat... I'm sure you'll appreciate it... It even ends cutely... It's, by no means, bad at all..
6. "BANG BANG BANQUET" - Another great piece... Even if you can help to not dance to it, you'll definitely find yourself tapping to the tune... I'd like to know how they used this piece in the show (since I don't really watch the show)...
7. "FAX ME" - Very classical in sound, but contrasted by some beeping sounds of office supplies like a phone or fax machines (:P).... I like it... It's got some really nice tunes...
8. "ROKKI WA DOKO" - This one's another track for keeps... It has a sad nature to it that I just can't quite put my finger to... The combination of strings and the xylophone has a sort of child-like innocence to it... Sounds dreamy, yet melancholy... I like how it 'ends' in the middle and 'starts' again...
9. "SPOTTER" - From the very few episodes of the series I've seen, this one seems to get a lot of airplay (is that the right word?)... It has the essence of technology with the techno-like beat to it, combined with strings that really add to its mood... It gets catchier and catchier as the track plays on... The best part is when the chorus (and guitar) joins in the middle transition... One of the great tracks in this CD for sure...
10. "LET'S OIL" - This short piece is somewhat unnerving (not in a bad way in my case) due to its fast-paced tune... This won't be your favourite, but it's goes to my most favorite track in the entire GITS:SAC canon--"Cream"...
11. "CREAM" - Now we get to my most favorite track Ms. Yoko Kanno composed for the show... It really took a second or third time of listening before it really got to me indefinitely... HIDE's rapping is top-notch... The first verse of the rapping isn't really the clincher for me, but rather the 'bridge' to the 'chorus' before Maaya Sakamoto sings 'la, la, la' which I also absolutely love... This 'bridge' to the 'chorus' is so different in most of the rap songs I hear, it's worth noting the fast-paced singing is a darn catchiest rap tune I've heard... I hope to find other people who really like this song....
12. "SPIDER BITES" - This is the instrumental/music box version of "Be Human"... It's lovely and poignant in a different way the original song evokes...
13. "GOOD BY MY MASTER" - A choral piece that's haunting yet technological with it's sound... A very nice combination IMO, that's very hard to achieve... A great, great piece...
14. "PIECE BY TEN" - Probably the saddest piece for this soundtrack, or the series for that matter... This orchestral track was played during the episode where the tank run amok and the Major was able to see the memories of the inventor placed inside the tank... The piece heightens to a beautiful climax in the middle that really pulls your heartstrings... A very lovely tune...
15. "WHAT CAN I SAY" - A song sung by a child named Sunny (at least I think s/he's a child)... It's again sad but a more classy way of singing it--kinda like a torch song or bar song but with a kid singing the lyrics... I love this piece but I'm particularly annoyed at how short it is... Love the lyrics too...
>> The Shorts:
16. "HI!" - Weird...
17. "I'M NOT STRAIGHT" - Sounds Cowboy Bebop-ish... It's cool...
18. "AI SENTAI TACHIKOMANZU" - an extremely funny and catchy take on those Power Ranger type songs... I love it!... Some may get annoyed by the singing... But I found it very cute and catchy...
19. "PRO BOWLER TACHIKOMA" - Have you heard the opening song for L/R?... Well, it kinda sounds a lot like it...
20. "DON'T SPONGE ME" - Another 'too short' track... I'd like to hear this longer since it sounds really interesting...
21. "PO'D POD" - Sounds like a computer game... *Plop-plop-plop*
22. "CIAO" - And then they say goodbye...
I'd have lots of friends, and I'd stay out too late..........2006-02-03
As I listen to "be human" for the uptenth time whilst writting this review, I can honestly say that words cannot accuratly describe how I feel about this album, if you wish to know, you should feel it for yourself...
As mentioned above, the first track is by far one of the most, if not the most, moving to me in both the melodic and lyrical structure of tense, after all it is the album title, although from the looks of some of these other reviews, it seems you'll either love it or hate it.
tracks 2 through 7 are an insight to the Tachikomas' precocious child like single persona, most examplified by their use in "Tachikoma no Hibi" from the anime. (FAX Me was particularly halarious in my opinion.)
Tracks 8 and up begin to get more serious as they deal with the circumstances leading up to the Tachikomas' fate in the first season. I was particularly overjoyed upon the incluion of Spotter and Cream, as they (as well as others) were not present in the first OST volume.
Tracks 12 to 15 pretty entail the emotional climax of the story. I'd like to add that Track 15 does a perfect job of wrapping it all up and leaving one feeling satisfied, although it's not the end of the album, it's the end of the tracks listed giving way to an Omake to top things off just as "Tachikoma no Hibi" was to the anime and can allow the album to be viewed as an episode in it's own right as it would contain an introduction, a build up to eventual conflict, ending with a climax, then topped off with TachiHibi.
I shall finalize this review by saying that the cover artwork is very well done, and can range from amusing to heartwarming; the lyrics are included as well.
A Fantastic Album!.......2005-11-07
Although ignored a little bit, this is a good album and a great addition to the Ghost in the Shell OST collection.
1 - Be Human
A good, low-down start to the album, although it could be better.
The simple, childish lyrics make you appreciate things, and the melody is very nice. The singer makes it a bit unpleasant to listen to.
2 - Trip City
Fast-paced and with a good rhythmn, the real hook of this song is the "Take me, take me to the lab," chorus, but is otherwise not very catchy. Good music, though.
3 - Patch Me
A little electronic song, very short, and not very memorable.
4 - Tachikoma no Iede
One of the highlights of the album, this is very feel-good and easy listening, with a simple, fun melody. The piano, flute and violin go together nicely.
5 - Osanpo Tachikoma
Paired with the previous track, this is another gem. While the first was traditional music, this is done almost completely in synthesizer, with French vocals halfway through for a nice touch. Again, very cute and feel-good.
6 - Bang Bang Banquet
A high-spirited song, and very catchy, with drums and synthesizer, as well as a few vocals. Played often when the Tachikomas are debating over things, it's very mischevious-sounding.
7 - FAX me
An interesting piece with a string quartet, and the sounds of a computer and a fax machine in between. Not bad, but not good either.
8 - Rocky wa Doko?
An episode-specific song, the title, "Where is Rocky?" is in reference to a dog a tachikoma is looking for in the episode. The string instrument and the violin synthesizer go together well. A very peaceful song to listen to.
9 - Spotter
Definately the song that makes the album worth buying, this isn't included on any other of the OSTs, yet is featured so often on the series, you wonder why it's on this "Concept Album" of sorts. Starting out slow and quiet, it gradually brings you into the song, before going into another quiet section and returning to the action. Much like Inner Universe, this is an excellent piece of work, if not the highlight of the album.
10 - Let's Oil
Another mini-song, much like Patch Me, and not very memorable.
11 - Cream
An interesting song, yet very likeable in it's own way. Starting out quirky, it goes into some Japanese Rap, with a semi-melodic chorus, with a string section afterwards and a beautiful vocal and guitar. A very nice song, if you're in the mood for it.
12 - Spider Bites
A "music-box" version of Be Human, it's short and sweet.
13 - Good By My Master
Sad, dramatic music, this isn't easy to listen to at the beginning, but definately picks up at the end and really sets the mood. Very operatic.
14 - Piece by Ten
One of the sadder pieces in the entire series, the strings are totally heart-breaking (especially in context with the scene it's used in!), making this another gem of the album.
15 - What Can I Say?
A child and piano, with sweet lyrics and a simple, beautiful ending. A great end to the album, as well.
There are also 5 extra tracks on the album:
- Hi! : Simply Tachikoma's introducing themselves "Ta-unchi-kokoma...tachikoma-ko!"
- I'm not straight : Drums and bass! An interesting thing that I'd expect out of Samurai Champloo.
- AI sentai Tachikoma : a total rip on lame, sentai (power rangers)-ish shows, featuring the tachikomas. The translation of the lyrics in the booklet are hilarious!
The next three are little electronic ditties that don't distinguish themselves much.
Overall, a good album with several wonderful tracks and a few that fail to meet the mark.
I'd reccomend this to anyone who likes the series.
Being Human is the Condition.......2005-09-04
This series of scores should be termed Season 1 CD Soundtrack 2, from the popular series, "Ghost in the Shell: A Stand Alone Complex". Renowned composer, Yoko Kanno once again blends a magnificent array of stylish jazz, bouncing techno, thunderous rock and smooth ballads that only she can accomplish.
Average customer rating:
- Not quite a classic, but close
- A pretty good album, but light years ahead of it's time
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I Stand Alone
Al Kooper
Manufacturer: Columbia
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Blues Rock
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ASIN: B000AO8C42
Release Date: 1994-02-11 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- I Stand Alone
- Camille
- One
- Coloured Rain
- Soft Landing on the Moon
- I Can Love a Woman
- Blue Moon of Kentucky
- Toe Hold
- Right Now for You
- Hey, Western Union Man
- Song and Dance for the Unborn, Frightened Child
Customer Reviews:
Not quite a classic, but close.......2007-05-15
Hmmm...only one review of this album, and One is the lonliest number that you'll ever do...so now there's two.
Forgotten is the appropiate word for this, Al Kooper's first solo album. But it is certainly NOT appropriate that it's a forgotten album. It ranks as a milestone of 1968-69, and actually of milestone of the 60s, period. IMO, it isn't quite as strong as Child Is Father To The Man, either in terms of composition or production, but it's close. The sound collages that prevade the album are either nuicences or profound artistic touches, depending on your point of view. Personally I find some of them the former and some the latter.
As usual, Kooper is a master interperator of outside material, offering great versions of One (Harry Nilsson), Coloured Rain (Traffic),Toe Hold (Stax;Porter and Hayes) and Western Union Man (Jerry Butler; Gamble and Huff). Again, IMO, he stumbles with Blue Moon Of Kentucky. Don't get me wrong, it's an inspired choice, but Kooper missteps on the production. Evidently he's trying to do his interpretation of the Sun echo, but he gets carried away, and the song is drenched past the point of saturation.
Kooper also comes up with some great originals: the 6/8 ride of I Stand Alone, the gentle lilt of I Can Love A Woman, the hazy psychedelics of Right Now For You and the Beatlesque Song And Dance For The Unborn, Frightened Child. And while Camille is quite at the same level compositionally, it does offer a superb arrangement and production. However, Al again takes one serious misstep with Soft Landing On The Moon. I know this was 1968, but this is merely 4 minutes of padding. Period.
Up until recently, I've been confined to enjoying an old LP version of this album. I just received this Japanese, and I'm listening to it as I write this. Though it doesn't compare to my recent 24 bit remaster of New York City (You're A Woman), it's nice to hear it without the clicks and pops.
If think you you've "heard it all" and haven't listened to Al Kooper, you're fooling yourself.
A pretty good album, but light years ahead of it's time.......2006-05-21
I first became acquainted with this album in May of 1985. I came home one Saturday night from a work day, and found a bunch of record albums in the trash pile in front of my apartment. This was one of them. It's Kooper's first solo album after quitting Blood, Sweat, and Tears, and just before the now legendary Bloomfield, Kooper and Stills Super Sessions. One thing is realized here when it comes to writing lyrics Kooper is lacking, but as far as writing the music he's crafted. Mind you some of this is eccentric dribble with the sensual foreplay laughter at the beginning of "Overture", and then going into the title cut afterwards where I prove my point this is Kooper's weak spot as the lyrics are forgettable, and the music is drab, but don't yank it off yet because it gets better as the next song dabbles with the classical side of Kooper with the song "Camille." The highlights would come after a decent cover of the Nillson song "One" where Kooper would actually release this shortly after Steve Winwood recorded it for the Mr. Fantasy album with Traffic, and that's "Coloured Rain", and I say hands down Kooper's was 1,000 times better. "Soft Landing On The Moon" is by far the ultimate organ instrumental it spanks "The Happy Organ" royally, and finally "I Can Love A Woman" is a beautiful love song which sounds like it could've been released in 1971, or 1972, but it was released in 1968. The version of "Blue Moon Of Kentucky" is a hand-clapping rocker here, and finally the last highlight of this album is "Right Now For You." It was a interesting piece of music, and if I can get this on cd at a reasonable price I'd snatch it up in a heartbeat again.
Average customer rating:
- Simply amazing, a few cracks in a otherwise very beautiful looking crystal.
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Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 3
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Similar Items:
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 2
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
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- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Be Human
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Be Human
ASIN: B000E5HGRG |
Product Description
Track list: the end of all you know, japanese title, know your enemy, japanese title, break through, flying low, japanese title, japanese title, japanese title, CHRisTmas in the SiLenT, access all areas, sacred terrorist, dear john, 35.7C, japanese title, flashback memory plug, dew
Customer Reviews:
Simply amazing, a few cracks in a otherwise very beautiful looking crystal........2006-02-25
Similar to: Chrono Trigger (Yasunori Mitsuda), Final Fantasy X-2 (Various Artists), and most Jazz styles (Gillespie, Monk, and a little bit of Gerschwin being audibly reminiscient.)
10 Second Decision: If you don't know what Stand Alone Complex is, but enjoy new directions in music, give it a try. If you know who Yoko Kanno is or own something of hers already, you know my answer on this recommendation. If International Music or Instrumentals put you to sleep, move along.
Yoko Kanno's work for anime is much like most alternative media artists much like Nobuo Uematsu, Yasunori Mitsuda, and almost the entire Jazz genre: brilliant but unfortunately overlooked. She does it all-- techno, rock, metal, jazz, blues, soul, funk, pop, big band, and even a little niche work like arabian folk and honky tonk harmonica. For Stand Alone Complex OST 3, you hear the work for the show, which leans more to the technical rather than analog, although the few pieces of 'natural' music is very simple, engaging and often powerful.
The nice surprise of the album is it's small ties to the prior ones: one track, "Flashback Memory Plug" is the title of the reprise of "Inner Universe" heard in the "First" Gig of episodes when Motoko and Laughing Man interacted, which is unfortunately Origa's only appearance on the album. The first track, "The End of All We Know", is a remake of the last piano solo of "To Tell The Truth" on OST 2, but now with Scott Matthews' vocals much like the prior "Psychedelic Soul" (also on OST 2) in an adagio fortelling both ruin and hope.
Also on the disc of note, "Dear John." So much to say about this song when it comes to melody alone. Haunting, inspiring, optimistic, forcasting change. Arguably one of the best things I've heard her make in my LIFE. Seriously. The only thing that upsets me about that track is that his vocals are muffled with filters to the point where it's more or less inaudible: you can hear a whisper of the lyric a half-second before the overdriven muffled audio overtakes it. Production mistake, or on purpose? We'll have to see it when it's audible during a Second Gig episode.
So, yeah, Scott Matthews is on it. Who else? Gabriela Robin checks in with "Turkey", a Japanese language techno-infused choiral piece, driving with powerful bass that makes one feel like driving past the speed limit in the streets of Japan. Ilaria Graziano has two tracks on the disc: Dew, which is a very gorgeous track, but the only other issue I had was "Christmas in the Silent Forest". She's singing away from her range and comfort zone on this one: it sounds forced. No real change in melody between the lyrics and chorus, which makes it sound typically the same all throughout. I didn't like it, even after giving it 4-5 plays.
As for Yoko's instrumental work: "Access All Areas" is one of my favorites, easily heard during strategic computer work, like Massive Attack's feel, only much faster and intricate. "Know Your Enemy" is a nice, multi-layered track, sounding much like the Serenity Film Score: violins, slow and soft piano, and builds to different melodies, like a playback of someone's memories is happening at the same time. "35.7 Degrees C" is another reminiscent track of "First" Gig Stand Alone Complex, when Motoko and Batoh had a conversation on a particularly important night (the best I could put it without any spoilers). It's cool, subdued synthesizer backing a solo saxophone firing as clear as a trumpet makes it easily recognizable for fans of the series. "Incomplete Love Song" is a short and abrupt, but very peaceful track. "Access All Areas" is a rapid-techno infiltration kind of track: something to play when trouncing someone in a computer game, or dodging sunday drivers, so it's very energized.
Basically, if you're looking at this description, you should be familiar with her past work such as Macross Plus, Cowboy Bebop and Wolf's Rain, or you heard the music in Stand Alone Complex and liked it, so this disc is pretty clear on what you can expect from her from the beginning. If you have no idea what any of that is, it's a treat, but may be inaccessible to a first time listener who may be turned off to 'international music', and what I see as a scuff on an otherwise great track like "Dear John", one may be irritated with not hearing the vocals and may pan it, but it's still a worthwhile CD in my opinion.
Average customer rating:
- Very Amazing
- Maybe 50 for pleasure, then skip all the rest...
- Be Human...
- Hey what?! Even too brief, it's still Yoko!!
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Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Be Human
Yoko Kanno
Manufacturer: Jvc Victor
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 2
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ASIN: B0000CD8H8
Release Date: 2003-11-03 |
Tracks:
- Be Human
- Trip City
- Patch Me
- Bang
- Fax Me
- Spotter Lets Oli
- Cream
- Spider
- Good By My Master
- Piece By Ten
- What Can I Say
Album Description
Subtitled - Stand Alone Complex Soundtrack - Be Human. Japanese animation soundtrack arranged by Yoko Kanno. 15 tracks. Victor. 2004.
Customer Reviews:
Very Amazing.......2006-06-18
i thought the be human soundtrack like much of the other yoko kanno GITS cd's was very good. im a big fan of her music so when i bought the cd ( which after going to many different cd store and not finding and having to by it online ) i expecting to hear the real sound of yoko kanno and thats what i got. many of the songs ( not to sound cheesy ) touched me, theres something about her music that to me brings a sort of nostalgic feelings in many of the songs. Take track 11.cream for example everytime i hear it i think past relationships or a crush i might have or past experiances. its music like that just for some reason makes you look deep into yourself and bring out so many emotions that they feel overwhelming sometimes, the same for track 12. fish silent-cruise or track 13. some other time from the GITS:SAC OST soundtrack that just touch a nerve or somthing and its like you feel the emotion of the song or the other way around. i guess its hard to explain but thats the effect that yoko kanno has on some many people i would believe, she so creative in masterfull in using so many different types of instruments and amazing singers and perfomers like HIDE, Origa, Scott Matthew or even Gabriela Robin ( who they say is yoko kanno herself )who themselves help to bring even more out of the song and help set that depressing or happy or dramatic feeling in the song. yoko kanno is materfull and a genius in what she does. so i would say if you ever pick up a yoko kanno cd or pick up Be Human listen to it really good and you'll see what i mean and get this huge review.
Maybe 50 for pleasure, then skip all the rest..........2006-02-02
As I listen to "be human" for the uptenth time whilst writting this review, I can honestly say that words cannot accuratly describe how I feel about this album, if you wish to know, you should feel it for yourself...
Looking at this in a non-emotional way, it is very good to say the very least; Traces of Kanno can be strongly felt in each track...
As mentioned above, the first track is by far one of the most, if not the most, moving song on the album in both the melodic and lyrical structure of tense, after all it is the album title.
tracks 2 through 7 are as the first reviewer stated, an insight to the Tachikomas' precocious child like single persona, most examplified by their use in "Tachikoma no Hibi" from the anime. (FAX Me was particularly halarious in my opinion.)
Tracks 8 and up begin to get more serious as they deal with the circumstances leading up to the Tachikomas' fate in the first season. I was particularly overjoyed upon the incluion of Spotter and Cream, as they (as well as others) were not present in the first compilation volume.
Tracks 12 to 15 get pretty emotional (for me at least) since not only because one was used at the end of the season, but because that fact is combined with Kanno's strong emotion influencing melodies. I suppose you'll have to see the end in order to understand.
I'd like to add that Track 15 does a perfect job of wrapping it all up and leaving one feeling satisfied, although it's not the end of the album, it's the end of the tracks listed leaving room for only one thing: An Omake! The next 7 tracks are comprised of entirly of "Tachikoma no Hibi" from the opening to the ending as well as a bonus track entitled: "AI Sentai Tachikoma" or Super AI team Tachikomanzu~
The cover artwork is very well done, and can range from heartwarming to lighthearted; the lyrics are included as well. It should be added that the bonus tracks arn't listed on the back of the CD case nor are they listed here. as a matter of fact, only half of the CD is listed here.
Here are all of the tracks before the Omake:
1. be human
2. trip city
3. patch me
4. Tachikoma's House Leave
5. (kanji) Tachikoma
6. bang bang banquet
7. FAX Me
8. Where's Locky?
9. Spotter
10. let's oil
11. cream
12. spider bites
13. good by my master
14. peice by ten
15. what can I say?
Be Human..........2006-01-30
This will be my first review on amazon.
I finally got the urge to write and I must say it is for a very nice soundtrack. I got my copy of Be Human with one of the Ghost in the Shell: SAC dics. My favorite track is Be Human and brings a tear to my eye every time I listen to it. Yoko Kanno does such a wonderful job bringing emotion to her music. Past the first track the rest of the disc is filled with the child-like whimsy of the Tachikomas.
If you like Yoko Kanno this is a must have for your collection.
Hey what?! Even too brief, it's still Yoko!!.......2004-11-21
All based on the adventures of a robot character (ridiculous and bad-named. Something like ...Toshikowa? Toshigawa? ...Toshiwhat?!!), a side story of the TV animation show "Ghost in the Shell Stand Alone Complex", this soundtrack has only one big problem : it's not as long as expected ! Less than 45 minutes, it's incredibly too brief for a Yoko Kanno Soundtrack, and album of this quality ! For the rest, nothing to say. It's has ever: perfect! A very weird, inventive and fully masterized compilation of classical-rock-techno-ethnic music pieces, witch will complete the collection of the most regarding if they are open-minded. With, as a bonus, a parody of japanese title song for Giant Robot show... Not as good as the two other GITS soundtracks, because less serious and dark, but hilarious, as the pics in the booklet!! And a robot that dream to be human, to compehend what it feel to have its heart breaked...
(Oh yes, I don't have seen the show. I don't mind anyway.Music speaks by itself)(And I'm not a kid. I just don't know how to write a review!! And to write in correct english, but I hope it's comprehensible!)
Product Description
BAMBOO -
WE STAND ALONE TOGETHER -
Track Listing:
Disc 1 (Audio CD)
1. Probinsyana (3:25)
Lyrics & Music by: Alex Cruz
2. Feelin' Alright (5:17)
Lyrics & Music by: Dave Mason
3. So Far Away (4:16)
Lyrics & Music by: Carole King
4. Alive (3:43)
Lyrics & Music by: Gossard, Stone C./Vedder, Eddie
5. 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover (5:27)
Lyrics & Music by: Paul Simon
6. Prayer For The Dying (3:15)
Lyrics & Music by: Seal/Isidore
7. Umagang Kay Ganda (4:06)
Lyrics & Music by: Felipe Monserrat, Jr.
8. Tatsulok (17:17)
Lyrics & Music by: Romeo Dongeto
Disc 2 (CD Extra)
9. These Days [Minus Ira] (4:14)
10. As the Music Plays the Band [Minus Ira] (4:34)
11. Children of the Sun [Minus Ira] (3:36)
12. Hallelujah [Minus Ira] (4:48)
13. Probinsyana [Minus Ira] (3:34)
14. As the Music Plays the Band [Minus Nathan] (4:35)
15. Lightyears [Minus Nathan] (2:35)
16. Take Me Down [Minus Nathan] (4:04)
17. These Days [Minus Nathan] (4:14)
18. Probinsyana [Minus Nathan] (3:33)
19. As the Music Plays the Band [Minus Vic] (4:36)
20. Mr. Clay [Minus Vic] (4:02)
21. Hallelujah [Minus Vic] (5:27)
22. Much Has Been Said [Minus Vic] (4:55)
23. Probinsyana [Minus Vic] (3:32)
<2007 EMI Records, Philippines>
[Preferred Seller for this item: cdpeople115]
Average customer rating:
- "Rise" is my best
- If you like the music from Cowboy Bebop...
- Kanno Yoko does it again!
|
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Theme
Yoko Kanno
Manufacturer: Jvc Victor
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
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- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Vol. 3
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- Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Be Human
ASIN: B00013YSYA
Release Date: 2004-02-02 |
Tracks:
- Get9 Jilmax
- Rise Origa
- Icy Mice Gabriela Robin
- Get9 (Naked) Jillmax
Album Description
Japanese soundtrack contains the intro theme to the anime 'Ghost In The Shell' (Stand Alone Complex 1st) & 'Ghost In The Shell' (Stand Alone Complex 2nd). Features four tracks, 'Get 9' Jillmax, 'Rise' Origa, 'Icy Mice' Gabriela Robin, & 'Get 9' (Naked) Jillmax. All music by Yoko Kanno. Victor. 2004.
Customer Reviews:
"Rise" is my best.......2004-07-17
This CD was released after SAC 2nd gig has started in Japan. If I say correctly, "Get 9" is used as an opening song for SAC (1st) when it was broadcasted through regular TV program. (So, you can't listen this song on SAC's DVD.) "Rise" is the opening song for SAC 2nd gig. "Tadokoro's Secret Party" is a BGM which has been used for 2nd gig's episode 3.
Anyway, I really like "Rise", which containts more English lylics than "Inner Universe". I listen it everyday! Orga's voice is so misterious that I really love so much.
If you like the music from Cowboy Bebop..........2004-06-29
First of all, who is Yoko Kanno? Well, besides being the composer for this CD, she is also the brillance behind music from anime titles such as: Cowboy Bebop, Card Captor Sakura, X, Wolf's Rain, The Vision of Escaflowne, and more, besides!
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex the anime is a sequel of sorts to the first Ghost in the Shell. This soundtrack contains four tracks from that anime. Ghost one was a classic similar in appeal to titles such as Akira.
Kanno Yoko does it again!.......2004-01-24
Kanno Yoko (or Yoko Kanno) is an amazing musician. The music she has created for "Macross Plus," "Cowboy Bebop," and Otomo's "Memories" is nothing short of incredible with its eclectic mix of genres, transcending all the limitations of those styles of music, bringing them all together into a cohesive sound that is different yet it all makes sense. Her music for "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex" is no different. Running the gamut from atmospheric vocals to hard rock to classical beauty, there is no ground uncovered, no stone unturned, but it's just so good to listen to. Strongly reminiscent of "Macross Plus" not thematically, but rather in the range of eclecticism and the choice of vocalists. The tracks "Stamina Rose" (my favorite) and "Fish 'n' Silent Cruise" bear a striking resemblance to "A Sai En" from "Macross Plus," but without sounding rehashed or copied. Other greats are "Run Rabbit Junk," "Where Does the Ocean Go?" and "Beauty Is Within Us." Just a great collection of music for both fans of the anime and fans of music in general. This is not to be missed...if you can find it, I strongly recommend that you get it. I think and feel you won't be disappointed.
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Album Review
Album Review