It’s a been a long time since my last entry for Megumi Hayashibara (林原めぐみ), and the main reason is that most of
her songs are not on Youtube anymore.
“Kagirinai Yokubou no
Naka ni” is not one of the songs I listen to the most from her, but it’s one I
know for a long time, since I was 14 or 15 years old in 2005. At the time, I
liked to watch everything related to the Slayers franchise (スレイヤーズ), from movies and OVAs to the anime itself… and “Kagirinai Yokubou no
Naka ni” happened to be the theme song for the “Slayers Special” OVA (スレイヤーズすぺしゃる), which got aired in three separate episodes between 1996 and 1997.
Since I’m talking about a
song from my favorite singer, it has a lot for me to like, with Megumi’s very
professional vocals (she shines as a singer here) being important to notice. Besides
that, what I like the most here is the build… from the mysterious verses and
warm pre-chorus, to the explosive and strong chorus. And the arrangement, with
all the keyboard and wild guitars punctuating the song, is typical from its
era. All in all, “Kagirinai Yokubou no Naka ni” succeeds in being what it is: a
good Shounen (少年) anime song.
“Kagirinai Yokubou no Naka ni” was released in
May 1996, reaching #20 on the Oricon chart and selling 69,510 copies. Even
though not included in any of Megumi’s original albums, it was finally part of
her “Slayers Best album”, which is called “Slayers MEGUMIX” (スレイヤーズ MEGUMIX) and was released in June
2008. Lyrics were written by Satomi Arimosi (有森聡美), while music was composed by Hidetoshi Sato (佐藤英敏). As for the arrangement, Sho Goshima (五島翔) was the responsible.
"Slayers MEGUMIX", from my personal collection
Hello, Marcos.
ReplyDeleteWow! Hayashibara has been around that long. I really like that melodic thrum that acts as the foundation for the entire song, and it was pretty nostalgic to hear those old 80s synthesizer blasts. They reminded me of Yes' "Owner of a Lonely Heart" and Art of Noise.
Yeah, like we've discussed before, some of Megumi's 90s anime songs did have this somewhat throwback sound to the 80s. Strangely, they probably felt
Deletereally modern creating those kind of songs, but there's certainly a gap in time here.
Don't really mind Yes, but love "Owner of a Lonely Heart". Such a classic song!