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ratacuss · 2 years ago
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thesunlounge · 4 years ago
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Reviews 344: Oto No Wa
I’m overjoyed to write again about Music for Dreams’ “Serious Collector Series,” not only because this run of compilations has produced some of the best vinyl sets of the past few years in the form of Jan Schulte’s Tropical Drums of Deutschland, Moonboots’ Moments in Time, and Basso’s Proper Sunburn, but also because the newest such collection, Oto No Wa: Selected Sounds of Japan 1988 - 2018, features a trio of curators who have all influenced this blog in significant ways. Listed first on the breathtaking cover is Ken Hidaka, who in addition to having a storied career as a DJ, journalist, and international record label liaison, has had a significant hand in coordinating many of my favorite reissues from the past few years…things such as Gigi’s Illuminated Audio on Time Capsule and Yutaka Hirose’s Nova + 4 on WRWTFWW, not to mention facilitating serenitatem…that spellbinding collaboration between Yoshio Ojima, Satsuki Shibano, and Visible Cloaks released last year on RNVG Intl. Then there’s Max Essa, one of the premiere practitioners of the balearic beat, whether it’s remixing tracks into euphoric seaside cruisers or producing expansive original works such as “Panorama Suite” for Is It Balearic?, the Lanterns LP for Music for Dreams, or his recently concluded trio of EPs for Hell Yeah Recordings: Themes From The Hood, The Cad & The Lovely, Haz Zan Roc, and The Great Adventure. And finally comes Dr. Rob, a far-ranging musical adventurer and gifted wordsmith whose reviews, interviews, mixes, and stories spread across Test Pressing and Ban Ban Ton Ton showed me entirely new ways to write about music, with his expressive poetics, deep references, and inimitable sense of cleverness rising far beyond standard music criticism and going a long way towards inspiring the creation of this very website.
As far as the music comprising Oto No Wa is concerned, Dr. Rob gives some background at Ban Ban Ton Ton, where he speaks of the trio meeting after one of their Lone Star nights at Bar Bonobo and compiling an initial list of some 200 hundred fantasy selections, which was miraculously whittled down to just 20 tracks. But then, the typically unflinching Japanese record label ecosystem slashed that list to all but nothing, leading Ken, Max, and Dr. Rob to reconsider the entire experience. I like to think that this was ultimately for the better, for in reworking the concept and flow of Oto No Wa, our trio of selectors struck upon the brilliant idea to, in the words of Dr. Rob, ”plot a course from pioneers, through to younger generations who`ve picked up the baton,” resulting in a spectacular set of balearic eclecticism focused on the 90s and 00s, which are periods often missed in the world of Japanese archival reissuing. Indeed, in contrast to the environmental ambiance, city pop, fusion, and jazz so often considered, the sounds here lean much closer to the romantic seaside vibrations of Flower Records’ Silent Dream CD mixes and the Ibizan chill out comps of React, as house beats are repurposed for summer fusion sways, sun-dappled ivories seek out a panoramic horizon, strummed acoustics jangle in an island breeze, electric guitars slide across cinematic deserts, dubwise basslines stroll down white sand beaches, chamber strings play themes for impossible sunsets, and steel pans bring touches of Caribbean splendor. Elsewhere, balafons dance through tropical forests, oceanic soundbaths wash the spirit clean, deep sea explorations transmute into Berlin school magic, and ceremonial drum layers surround barely there violin reveries, with the entire experience being bookended by a pair of kankyō ongaku drifters.
Oto No Wa: Selected Sounds of Japan 1988-2018 (Music for Dreams, 2020) Yoshio Ojima’s “Sealed,” the sole track here from the 80s, comes from the second volume of the producer’s now legendary Une Collection Des Chaînons: Music For Spiral collection and sees glowing hazes moving in slow motion…these harmonious swells mimicking the motions of some celestial sea while textures of digital crystal twinkle overhead. The vibe is hopeful and soothing, though there are moments where the swelling drones turn minor key and melancholic and the glass and gemstone atmospheres get caught in hyperspeed delay trails. But we always return to the floating stretches of major key majesty, with the music perfectly suited to scoring the motions of clouds across the sky or leaves drifting down a stream. And like many of Ojima’s tracks, there is a false ending…a fade to silence preceding a rebirth, wherein the melodic textures from before are reconfigured into mysterious forms…as if the cerulean sky scene mentioned earlier has been washed out by moody grey rainclouds. The original mix of Olololop’s “Mon” revels in washy 90s post-rock atmospherics, with increasingly free ambient jazz drumming underlying cascading pianos and plucked harps. And while the “orte Remix” by Kumi Hayashi and Takaaki Suzuki preserves many of these elements, the vibe here is more oriented towards classical chill out. The beats are rigid and slamming as they lock into a mechanized seaside swing, with the original’s jazz drumming fluidity replaced by pounding kicks, panning ride taps, and sketchy shaker patterns. Piano and harp flow into the stereo field, dropping plucked rays of golden harmony and washes of ivory ethereality before settling into a balearic dreamdance, one carried by gentle trance electronics and layers of droning bass positivity. At some point the rhythms pull away and we find ourselves in an extended beatless bliss out, wherein melodies of ocean crystal pulse around melodious harp motions, abstracted kick taps flutter on echo breezes, and pan-pipes sparkle in the distance. And later, the mix reduces to an industrial downbeat drum sway and a ceremonial hum of subdued choral mesmerism as the piano continues merging vibes of new age fusion and beachside romance.
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Among my favorite cuts here is Kazuya Kotani’s “Fatima,” coming from the 2007 CD Made in Love. Seed shakers and rainsticks roll through echo machines, oceanic string panoramas shift in phase, and bongos and congas beat out a seaside beat as a cooing voice whispers sweet nothings in a way reminding me of Sth. Notional’s “Yawn Yawn Yawn (Dream… Another Reality Mix)”. Bulbous basslines bring touches of gentle dub exotica and a glorious chill out breakbeat swings with infectious forward momentum even as it lands like air, while pianos shimmer and shine via wavering chord mirages and prismatic delay leads that presage Coyote’s use of the instrument. The way everything locks in is so perfect, with hand drums bopping alongside the seaside breakbeat cruise and angelic strings glowing beneath sparkling ivory dreamspells…the whole thing coming together like some prototypical cut from one of José Padilla’s Cafe del Mar compilations or a Phil Mison curated Real Ibiza collection. At some point the drums pull away, leaving behind soft piano flutters, breathy whispers, and overlapping waves of orchestral resonance. And when the beats return, they are joined by heartwrenching chamber string progressions…a sort of swooning dance of cinematic sunset majesty before the track effortlessly glides back towards beachside chill out perfection. The B-side opens with “N.I.C.E. Guy” by Scha Dara Parra, who Dr. Rob describes in the liner notes as “Japan’s answer to the Beastie Boys.” The “Nice Guitar Dub” of the track presented here takes us into the world of the Major Force dance collective, and sees house kicks, hand drum loops, and clipped snares underlying lysergic repetitions of “feel good / checking things out” before dropping into a summery groove led by walking sunshine jazz bass, Hiroshi Fujiwara’s acoustic guitar strums, and Hirofumi Asamoto’s piano…a sort of ambient honky tonk cascade scoring some lagoon adjacent saloon. Occasionally, heavenly strings blow through the stereo field to envelop the vocal samples and there’s a strange midtro given over to urgent stick clicks and rimshots while towards the end, b-boy drum cut-ups and turntablist flourishes disturb the flow.
Little Tempo is an ever shifting group of dub and reggae explorers led in part by Takeshi “Tico” Toki and his shimmering steel pan. The collective has played the world over and released an impressive number of albums since the mid-90s, one of which is Ron Riddim, a 2xLP from 1999 containing the track “Frostie.” A stoner beat moves beneath a tropical panorama of steel drumming, with hi-hats occasionally opening, shekeres scraping, and snares pushing through granular reverb, and as we drop into the groove, liquid dub basslines pulse and slide while a piano glistens in the moonlight. The ivory performance is powerful and awash in twilight romance and noir mystery, sometimes dancing in solo and other times accented by glimmering steel pan flourishes. Elsewhere, the pianos are replaced by electric guitars, which let loose bluesy slides and space western leads…the mixture of desert twang and equatorial riddim strongly evoking the dubbier sides of Tortoise. There’s a moment where the track gives over to martial snare intensity as amphibian lasers and telephonic tracers fire across the sky, with the latter sound pulling my mind to the work of Eddie C. And eventually, the track settles into a sort of bluesy reggae zone out, with subsonic basslines skanking and dubwise drums smacking while wavering steel drum mirages surround spaghetti western slides in the style of Doug McCombs. Karel Arbus & Eiji Takamatsu will of course be well familiar to readers of this blog, both for their amazing Some Backland Plaze tape on Max Essa’s Jansen Jardin and for that completely stunning rework of Cantoma’s “Kasoto” from last year. “Coco and the Fish,” taken from the aforementioned cassette, sees idiophones splashing through sea spray while enigmatic electronics swirl in the background…like a vortex of kosmische wonderment pulsating in colors of deep purple and blue, one that occasionally opens up to reveal deep house chord stabs. It’s hard to say whether the main instrument played is marimba or balafon, but either way, it’s a hyperkinetic performance exuding an energy at once meditative and ecstatic...all while phaser wisps, starshine sparkles, and hidden voices swirl in the distance.
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I first heard globetrotting DJ and Flower Records alum Kentaro Takizawa courtesy of Phil Mison and his Pure Ibiza 2xCD set released by I Label in 2008, which included the “Silent Dream Version” of the song taken from the aforementioned Silent Dream compilation. Originally though, the track closed Takizawa’s album Gradual Life from 2006, and this is the version included here. Ride cymbals shine amidst glorious murmurations of ambient synthesis while percussive eco fx mimic the songs of lizards and toads. Elecrosnares rocket across the spectrum, beauteous acoustic guitar arps fall like summer rain, and further six-string solos move in counterpoint, with subdead leads mesmerizing the mind. As psychoactive threads of static surround decaying triangles, sundowner string orchestrations ascend towards the clouds, causing the heart to soar in that Sacha Putnam or Vangelis kind of way, and when the beat drops, it’s a lackadaisical sway led by rolling bongos and tapped cymbals. Guitars dance playfully over a backdrop of fourth world alien magic and ever so often, filmic string themes diffuse into the spectrum. Elsewhere, the drums wash away, leaving e-pianos to execute breathtaking descents before disappearing into a synthesized mirage. Rainsticsk flow over the stereo field as the track evolves even further towards new age bliss, with a harmonious conversation of acoustic guitar sunshine proceeding in a fantasy jungle, wherein sunlight reflects off of glistening palm fronds and tropical birds sing intoxicating songs. And after returning to the bopping rhythms and tapestries of chill out exotica, the tracks ends with guitars being replaced by pianos while mermaid pads whoosh through a sunbathed rainforest setting. Mystical percussionist Yoshiaki Ochi inhabited similar circles to Yoshio Ojima, releasing through NEWSIC and seeing his music played, like Ojima’s, at the arts center of Wacoal lingerie company, otherwise known as Spiral. In “Balasong,” taken from 1990’s Natural Sonic, balafons bounce playfully while executing Steve Reich-style pattenrs of minimalist exotica. The drunken daydream motions and otherworldly idiophone polyrhythms are occasionally interspersed by fast motion twiddles and rapid fire rolls, while at the edge of the mix gourds buzz and textures of metal sparkle…perhaps the ghostly chiming of temple bells.
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Kaoru Inoue is a hugely influential figure who for decades has been perfecting his own esoteric combination of house, techno, ambient, and spiritual world music. “Wave Introduction” was originally released on the artist’s 2006 album Slow Motion before being repurposed as the opener for one of my favorite albums ever released: Inoue’s horizontal masterpiece Em Paz released in 2018 on Groovement Organic. The track features the relaxing sounds of waves crashing to shore, joined by twinkling synths, distant foghorns, and psychosonic liquid drips, which eventually transmute into a Reich-ian dream sequence awash in textures of mermaid crystal. Undulating bass arps support slow moving pads that drift like cosmic fog while rhythmic wisps of laser static tickle the mind and the whole thing takes on the feeling of a drunken dream dance that slowly moves towards ambient rapture. The influential Flower Records and its founder Eitetsu Takamiya are represented here by the highly sought after “Scuba” under Takamiya’s Little Big Bee alias. Psychedelic bubble clouds blow over Kenji Jinguiji’s slithering bass guitar romantics and the e-pianos of Plaza Fujisaki glow with a sort of new age spirituality while Hawaiian guitars slide across a sunburst sky. A hushed house beat is accented by gentle clacks and seed shaker pulses as Jinguji’s lowslung basslines lock into a balearic fusion dance replete with vocal slides up the fretboard and as the pacific breeze guitar slides swim between solar organ dub chords, spaceage arpeggiations flitter all around. I detect a definite lean towards The Orb’s early merging of dub, ambient, and techno, with a stereo field colored through by cut-off motions, resonance flares, and whalesong pads that settle into a haze of golden light. The beats cut away momentarily, leaving filtering cosmic synthetics, pulsing organ accents, and emotive basslines while stick clicks build a rainshower rhythm. Seafoam siren synths swell in strength and subsume the entire mix as angels breath rainbow mist across universal expanses and eventually, a liquid guitar slide reintroduces the south pacific chill out groove, which now features hyperkinetic click cascades.
Coastlines, the duo of Masanori Ikeda and Takumi Kaneko, are huge favorites around here and given that I reviewed their cover of Ralph MacDonald’s “East Dry River” when it was originally released as a 7” back in 2018, I’ll present a modified version of my words from that time: Joyously ascending piano chords and deep vocal bass percussions set the scene before we smash cut into a smooth coastal fusion jam, as tambourines and toms pound beneath radiant piano strokes and synthetic steel drum dances while four four house kicks and luscious sub-basslines move the body. Angels bring touches of pure euphoria as they rain down from the sky, and elsewhere, fretless bass solos wiggle above the island rhythm dreamscape…the Motohiko Hamase-style note clusters and liquiform slides trailing under subtle ping-pong delays while colorful hand drum accents evoke slow-motion dancing on some fantasy beach. There’s a brief moment where everything washes away, leaving lush piano chords and sparkling steel pans adrift in solitude, and later, after returning to the seaside house rhythms and melodic textures of jazz fusion fantasy, we are treated again to a crazed fretless bass solo, one that grows ever more frantic and chaotic before finally dispersing. Though beloved producer Susumu Yokota is no longer with us, his memory lives on via his profound influence and his intrepid bridgings of academic ambient and techno body pressure, not to mention archival projects such as the Jon Tye-assisted Cloud Hidden from 2019. “Uchu Taniyo” is taken from Yokota’s 1999 album Sakura and begins with a voice pushing through clouds of reverb as ritualistic percussion builds from the depths. Hand drums and wooden clacks lock into a ceremonial dance kissed by cosmic fx and growling ambient forms swirl into the stereo field…these morphing tremolo gurgles imbued with atmospheres of melancholy. Voices continue babbling as a violin enters the scene, letting loose folksy melodies and post-classical whispers that barely break through the layers of rhythmic repetition. And as the track comes to an end, the exotica drum webs fade out as frogsong electronics decay into the void.
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The vibe continues to spread out towards horizontal ambiance in “Time and Space,” a track exclusive to this compilation from the duo of Isao Kumano and Kenichi Takagi, who are often found working with Alex from Tokyo in Tokyo Black Star, but who here appear in their “secretive” Chillax guise. Crystallized sequences, smoldering static waveforms, and hazes of ocean either intertwine as chiming melodies ascend on unseen currents towards a sun soaked sea surface, and I can’t help but think of the underwater kosmische of Iury Lech and Miguel Noya, as well as the seafloor ambient excursions of Shelter on Profondeur 4000 and Private Agenda on Île de Rêve. Soft focus chord bursts breath ambient house ether into the mix while tick-tocking arps build slowly in the background, eventually growing in strength and taking over the mix as the vibe flows from deep sea drifting to Berlin school melodrama, wherein searing filter motions surround the spirit and vocoder cyborgs chant amidst subsuming chord decays. I’ve said much about Takashi Kokubo across this blog, though thus far everything has been focused around his hugely influential Get at the Wave. And given how well mined that album is by now, I’m quite thankful that Ken, Max, and Dr. Rob have opted instead for “Quiet Inlet,” a track appearing on Kokubo’s Eternity from 2006. Waves lap gently against the shore of some hidden island scene...a place of peace and picturesque beauty known only to the fish, reptiles, and birds. A calming piano lullaby enters the scene, marrying Satie-like ambiance and Riley-ian minimalism while digital colorations and e-piano bubble clouds flit all around. A choir of angelic sirens bathe the mix in vocal radiance while bell trees mimic sunlight refractions on the ocean’s surface and after a false ending, the dreamscape ivory cascades, pointillist e-piano melodies, and heavenly choirs return, with everything shrouded by pearlescent pad layers and gaseous blankets of reverb. Windchimes blow on a sea breeze and periodic swells of mermaid magnificence work into the mix and as the sampled waves continue their motions, they lull the mind towards daydream visages of the titular seaside paraiso.
(images from my personal copy)
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emiliemaria · 4 years ago
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Did a Nobuta wo produce fanart cause now I can.
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quillparchment · 6 years ago
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Does anyone talk about Nobuta wo Produce anymore or am I just 13 years late?
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shadowcutie · 6 years ago
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‘60 days’ of Voltage updated
I did a 60 days of Voltage challenge thing like 4 years ago, but I thought I’d update it since I’ve read a lot more since then.  I’m not doing it in 60 days though, and I removed/changed some questions.  Like the one about GREE, not even sure if its still a thing lol, yeah hi I’ve been in the fandom for a while.
Favorite guy(s)?
Takuto Hirukawa, Takao Maruyama, Chiharu Utsumi, Makoto Morimachi, Araya Kuze, Kyobashi Katsuyuki, and Shintaro Ando…in that order…maybe, I really can’t decide.
My first favorite was either Takuto or Takao, so even if they aren’t #1 they’ll always hold a special place in my heart for being my first Voltage husbands
The guy(s) you thought you’d dislike before reading their route?
Roberto Button, Koichi Natsukawa, Asahi Kakyoin, Hiro Sarashina, and Rihito Hatsune to name a few.
Least favorite guy(s)?
I haven’t disliked any character that I’ve played, yet.
However IF I had to pick Hiro Sarashina, Asahi Kakyoin, and Satoru Kamagari are the ones I like the least out of all the routes I’ve read so far.
NPC(s) who need their own route?
Tsukishiro from Our Private Homeroom!  At least give him a sub story…it could be like Chiharu Utsumi’s Forbidden Route which branches off of Shinichi Kagari’s route.
Your favorite…
Tsundere guy?  Takuto Hirukawa Flirty guy?  Kiyoto Makimura Unrequited love?  Shohei Aiba Childhood friend?  Makoto Morimachi Alpha guy?  Genji Higashiyama Sadistic guy?  Kyobashi Katsuyuki Stoic guy?  Keiichiro Minase Funny guy?  Shintaro Ando Sweet guy?  Takao Maruyama Yandere guy?  Araya Kuze Old guy?  Jinpachi Yushima, hahahaha… Mature guy?  Chiharu Utsumi (he’s mature for his age...sort of...sometimes...once or twice...hahahaha)
Favorite guy from…
(Games I’ve played every character’s season 1 main story)
Serendipity Next Door?  Shinobu Narita
Favorite guy from…
(Games I’ve played at least 50% of all character’s season 1 main story)
10 Days with My Devil?  Shiki Kurobane Bad Boys Do It Better?   Keiichiro Minase Be My Princess?   Keith Alford Dreamy Days in West Tokyo? Haruki Tanemura Enchanted in the Moonlight?   Samon Finally, in Love Again?   Sosuke Kikuchi In Your Arms Tonight?  Kiyoto Makimura Kiss of Revenge?  Kyosuke Narumi Love Letter from Thief X?  Takuto Hirukawa Metro PD Close to you?  Kyobashi Katsuyuki My Forged Wedding?  Takao Maruyama My Last First Kiss?  Makoto Morimachi My Wedding and 7 Rings?  Seiichirou Hayami Our Private Homeroom?  Shuya Komaki Our Two Bedroom Story?  Shusei Hayakawa Pirates in Love?  Nagi
Favorite guy from…
(Games I’ve played at least 2 character’s season 1 main story)
After School Affairs?  Chiharu Utsumi Celebrity Darling?  Shinnosuke Ichijo First Love Diaries?  Nao Fujimori Kiss Me on Clover Hill?  Shoichi Kiyota Kissed by the Baddest Bidder?  Mamoru Kishi My Sweet Bodyguard?  Hideki Ishigami Office Secrets?  Shingo Kai True Love Sweet Lies? Naomasa Sakura When Destiny Comes Knocking?  Shintaro Ando
Favorite guy from…
(Games I’ve played only 1 character’s season 1 main story, but don’t let that fool you I really like these stories)
Be My Princess 2? Maximillion Levaincois Destind: Mr. Almost Right?  Araya Kuze (my will power is apparently super easy to break...but Araya is the best...If I can romance a childhood friend yandere character then I will apparently throw away my morals hahahaha) Diary of a Step-Sister?  Masaki Saionji Love Brings You Home?  Hazuki Tojo In Your Arms Tonight 2?   Kazuya Seto Sakura Admist Chaos?  Yukimura Sanada Seduced in the Sleepless City?  Chihaya Koda
Favorite guy from…
(Games I haven’t played yet, so these are the ones I think will be my favorite…)
A Knight’s Devotion?  Ken A World With(out) You?  No one (Kotaro Kamiyama if I had to pick?) Butler Until Midnight?  Tomoki Matsuba Campus Romance 101?  Kaneto Fujimuro Class Trip Crush?  Hajime Shindo Codename: Cupid?  Motoharu Kotani Dangerous Seduction? Kentaro Inui Era of Samurai Code of Love?  Soji Okita Exclusively Yours: An Office Affair? Arata Osaka Forget Me Not, My Love?  Kenshin Shiota Kings of Paradise?   Yosuke Sagara Her Love in the Force?  Seiji Goto Irresistible Mistakes?  Natsume Asaoka Masquerade Kiss?  No one (Kei Soejima if I had to pick?) My Lady Juliet?  Haruto Miyake Tokyo Love Hustle?  Suzuki Mado or Harushige Chiluba if I had to pick?) Oops, I said yes?!?  Shu Hasunuma Professional Boyfriend?  Ikki Tatsumi Romance MD: Always On Call?   No one (Tetsuya Hosho if I had to pick?) Rose in the Embers?   Kyosuke Takatsukasa Scandal in the Spotlight? Iori Enjyo Star-Crossed Myth?  Karno Wanted: Romance Renegades? Shinji Ayano
Do your favorites have a trend in their appearance?  Their personalities?
I think it’s no secret that I like the black hair bespectacled and suit look.  As for personalities, I see a mix of tsunderes and childhood friends.
I’d have to go full spreadsheet mode, which tbh kind of sounds like fun, but I have a hypothesis that characters with similar personalities will have similar appearances.  It could just be a quirk of how Voltage styles their characters.
Favorite MC?  Least favorite MC?
I don’t really notice bad or good MCs.  I think either I’m just really good at immersing myself into the role of the trope filled naive MC, or I’m just too laissez-faire to get bothered by it. I’ve thought about it and I do have a few favorite MCs: Our Private Homeroom, Metro PD Close to You, Dreamy Days in West Tokyo, When Destiny Comes Knocking, and Destind: Mr. Almost Right.
Sakura Amidst Chaos, Celebrity Darling, and Be My Princess’ MCs come to mind as my least favorite MCs.
Best route(s)?
See the ‘Favorite guy from…’ section.
Worst route(s)?
Hiro Sarashina’s route isn’t BAD, but the progression of the romance felt weird to me like it all of a sudden skipped a step.  If you hadn’t noticed yet I have lots of mixed feelings about Hiro lol…
I think Yamato Kougami’s My Wedding and 7 Rings route was ehhhh.  It would have been a great story if they just left the twist out.  Just FYI his My Forged Wedding route is MUCH better.
Most realistic route(s)?
Realistic?  Uh…I dunno man, I romance guys in video games what do I know.
Saddest route(s)?
Sad?  We don’t tolerate sad stories in this household.  I like a few angsty plot points here and there, but I’m not about overly sad stories.
Happiest route(s)?
All of them?  My Forged Wedding and Dreamy Days in West Tokyo are pretty packed full of fluff.  I’ve read almost all of the main stories from these games, so I can confidently say that if you want a happy story play those.
First Voltage game?
My Forged Wedding or Love Letter from Thief X I believe.  I found Voltage probably mid to late 2012, when I was 17.
I played some of the GREE games, but I just didn’t like the story tickets and checkpoints system…that’s why I stopped playing visual novels from other companies like Arithmetic, NTT Solmare, etc.  I miss Starstruck Love lol.
Favorite Voltage game?
In terms of overarching plot…
Dreamy Days in West Tokyo, Diary of a Step-Sister, In Your Arms Tonight, In Your Arms Tonight 2, Kiss Me on Clover Hill, Kiss of Revenge, Kissed by the Baddest Bidder, Love Letter from Thief X, My Forged Wedding, My Sweet Bodyguard, Our Private Homeroom, Our Two Bedroom Story, Serendipity Next Door, and When Destiny Comes Knocking are my favorites.
You could say I like the student life and slice-of-life genres haha.
But I’m pretty sure My Forged Wedding’s plot is my absolute favorite.
Least favorite Voltage game?
Any game that the main stories are Love Choice.  Also games with the story tickets and checkpoint system.  I need to be able to read at my own pace.
Of the games I have played?  Sakura Amidst Chaos maybe.  I guess I like modern stories more. 
Games you haven’t played, but want to?
Butler Until Midnight and Class Trip Crush.
Games you haven’t played, but only have a lukewarm desire to play?
A Knight’s Devotion, Scandal in the Spotlight, Star Crossed Myth, and Codename: Cupid.
Games you haven’t played, and will probably only play when the stars align?
Dangerous Seduction, Era of Samurai Code of Love, Her Love in the Force, Irresistible Mistakes, Kings of Paradise, and Rose in the Embers.
Games you’ll NEVER play?
Tokyo Love Hustle (which sucks because the music and art are really great), A World With(out) You, Masquerade Kiss, and Destind Mr. Almost Right*…at least until ‘Love Choice’ is not a thing anymore, although tbh they don’t interest me even were they not Love Choice…
I also don’t have any plans to play the PARTY or Liar! games…even if they did migrate to the Love 365 app.
*yea I fucked that one up...but I did it for my love Araya and what are morals anyway?  I used hearts I had saved up from the previous daily wheel, it’s not like I spent money on it!
Favorite special/sub story/spinoff story?
Seduced in the Sleepless City’s Castaways, In Your Arms Tonight’s Baby Trouble?!, and all the His POVs are my favorites!
In Your Arms Tonight’s Another Story for Shohei and Genji were…really good!  I just needed to see them suffer a little bit with the MC not divorcing Koichi at the beginning…sorry not sorry.
Favorite epilogue, sequel, season n# story?
I’m slowly running out of Season 1 Main Stories I want to read, so I’ve started to branch out for my most beloved characters.
The formation of the relationship is really the most exciting part of the story for me, but for some characters maybe it’ll be nice to see the entire relationship from start to finish.
What plots, genres, themes, characters, etc. do you want to see in the future?
I really want the Japanese only titles to be translated…
Kimi o Aisu Nandodemo* and Hana Yori Dango ~F4 to Fāsutokisu~…for sure I would love to play.
*Kimi o Aisu Nandodemo aka Forget Me Not, My Love WAS TRANSLATED!!  It looks like Voltage has been bringing a lot of titles over, I’m not sure if they’re translating every title in the japanese app to english (I hope they do)...I’m just really excited!
As for totally new IPs…
Something sci-fi?  Time travel?  More love triangles?  More student-teacher relationships?  Villain romanceable characters?  MCs who are nerdy, tomboys, athletic, cynical, or antisocial?  GENDER BENDERS???  OH MY GOD.  Do I love any plot more than ‘Girl dresses up as a boy to be in an all-boys school’?  NO I DON’T.
There is only one thing that could top a gender bender……Yandere.
I doubt Voltage’s yanderes would be as dark or extreme as I like my yanderes, but… just take Kazuya Seto and Luke Foster (who I’ve heard is yandere-like, I’ll have to check it out someday) and just turn it up to eleven.
...Araya Kuze is a yandere...a soft yandere to be sure but he’s definitely the closest of all the characters I’ve seen.  He’s just...*chef kiss*
Things that Voltage should improve on?
Love Choice.  GET RID OF IT.  The main appeal of Voltage for me is the ownership of the stories.  Once you purchase the story…it’s yours.  Read it at your leisure, however many times you want, forever.
More stories where the endings are not just Super Happy, Happy, Neutral, Good, or Bad endings.  Potentially splitting the story paths up more than just different endings, although it could be done with separate stories I guess.
This is just my opinion, but most of the new games and new stories coming out are too focused on being ‘adult’ and sexual.  I just don’t come to Voltage for smut.  I’m here for romance, story, and relationship development which yes can include sex, but I’d almost prefer if it just faded to black instead of playing the 'how many different ways can we describe Eisuke thrusting into the MC’ game.
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sakabarfukusuke · 2 years ago
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明後日8/30南の島から 重要人物がこられます。 ゼシ! president present R4 8/30 (火) START 19:00~ 第1回 不定期演奏親睦飲み会 [一応 LIVE♪】 料金 【¥2,000 1d付】 沖縄宮古島 ギターと唄 イラブマサユキ氏 BOROBORONS 東京ムサコ 主に太鼓 小谷和也氏 kazuya palamecho kotani 国立・酒場 FUKUSUKE 東京都国立市東1-15-22 国立サニービル3階 042-574-0445 [email protected] http://www.ameblo.jp/sakabarfukusuke/ (at 酒場FUKUSUKE) https://www.instagram.com/p/Chy3dp1L0WO/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Nobuta wo Produce
Year : 2005 | Country : JP | Nb of episodes: 10
My rate: 3/10
Synopsis :
Kiritani Shuji is the popular guy who gets along with everyone, from the jerks to the nerds to the just plain weird. The one person Shuji cannot stand is Kusano Akira. To Shuji, Akira is just plain annoying. He laughs, talks and acts funny. Things heat up when a new student comes to school. Her name is Kotani Nobuko, a girl who has no self confidence at all and is content at being made fun of and bullied in school. Shuji and Akira come to an accord that in order to make use of their youth they will produce Nobuko as the next popular girl. One of the conditions, however, is that nobody should find out that they are working together as a team to make this concept possible. Unveiled here is the story of true friendship between three unlikely candidates who would not have been friends if not given the special circumstances.
Main cast :
Kamenashi Kazuya as Kiritani Shuji
Yamashita Tomohisa as Kusano Akira
Horikita Maki as Kotani Nobuko
Toda Erika as Uehara Mariko
Ukaji Takashi as Kiritani Satoru
Fukaura Kanako as Kiritani Nobuko
My thoughts on this drama :
This drama was insanely popular. I don't know why. I hated it. It's hard to explain why, but I found it weird and not that good in terms of acting, despite Maki Horikita's exceptional skills.
 A Favorite ?
NO
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theam-cjsw · 5 years ago
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The AM – Monday, May 4 2020
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A misty, mid-tempo Monday morning here on The AM. Drifting from ambient electronics to psych-folk daydreams, a brief remembrance of Tony Allen, and more mellowness than you can lazily wave a stick at.
New music from Air’s Nicolas Godin, Erased Tapes artist Ben Lukas Boysen, Calgary neo-psychedlists Devonian Gardens, and plenty of other goodness. Full track list is after the break.
Stream it on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/theamcjsw/the-am-monday-may-4-2020
Listen to it elsewhere: https://pods.link/j9bb8smxzns4n
Hour One:
The Office / The Community Absolutely Free • Two Cares Due None
Off Hour Wish Lash • Single
Day Sleeper Peace Keeper Bottler • Clementine EP
Civic Holiday Zachary Lucky • Plan B
Section IIIB Erik Hall • Music for 18 Musicians
Fatima Kazuya Kotani • Oto No Wa: Selected Sounds of Japan 1988-2018
Blast from the Past Reinhard Vanbergen • Single
Esperanza Rone • Room With A View
Kenotaph Ben Lukas Boysen • Mirage
Hour Two:
Turn Right, Turn Left Nicolas Godin • Concrete and Glass
Red Kite Plone • Puzzlewood
Amanita Es-K • Only So Much Time
You Got to Start Somewhere Circles Around the Sun • Circles Around The Sun
Go Back Tony Allen, featuring Damon Albarn • Film of Life
I Fell in Love Helado Negro • Adult Swim Singles
Rainbow White Poppy • Paradise Gardens
Sleeping Ora Cogan • Bells in the Ruins
Monk's Robes Deradoorian • Find the Sun
Drop and Pierce Marker Starling • High January
Hour Three:
Keep Your Head Up High The Farm Band • The Farm Band
Old Star Devonian Gardens • Old Star
We Are Not Ready ROY • PEACE LOVE AND OUTER SPACE
Sparrow Sungaze • Light In All Of It
Eye of the Storm Gold Celeste • Common Ground EP
Vous etes ici Bertrand Burgalat • Online single
Made to Measure Mae West abel collective • Greetings From Stanley Park
The Everlives Sleepkit • Champion Weekend
Don't Let Go (12" Version) Pink Industry • Don't Let Go
4 American Dollars U.S. Girls • Heavy Light
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jgfiles · 8 years ago
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Joker Game Anime: List of the main people who worked at it
A lot of people worked at the Joker Game anime... but somehow I couldn’t find an English list anywhere.
So, since while translating the ‘story’ pages from the official web I had to find out who was who, I decided to also catch this chance to make a list for the ones that the official web takes care to credit for each episode (the authors of the script and storyboard and the director and the animation director).
There are of course many more people behind each episode and just the names might not tell you much but I still think it’s worth to know them.
EP 01
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ - Director/演出: Nomura Kazuya (野村和也) Animation Director/作画監督: Yahagi Toshiyuki (矢萩利幸)
EP 02
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Nomura Kazuya (野村和也) Director/演出: Uematsu Junichi (安乱純志) Animation Director/作画監督: Nakamura Miyuki (中村深雪)
EP 03
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Hamana Takayuki (浜名孝行) Director/演出: Ninomiya Takeshi (二宮壮史) Animation Director/作画監督: Kubota Yasutaka (窪田康高) - Kotani Kyōko (小谷杏子)
EP 04
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Takeuchi Atsushi (竹内敦志) Director/演出: Hosokawa Hideki (細川ヒデキ) Animation Director/作画監督: Yamaguchi Asuka (山口飛鳥)
EP 05
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Kise Kazuchika (黄瀬和哉) Director/演出: Kise Kazuchika (黄瀬和哉) Animation Director/作画監督: Kise Kazuchika (黄瀬和哉)
EP 06
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Sunouchi Yūsuke (須之内佑典) Director/演出: Sunouchi Yūsuke (須之内佑典) Animation Director/作画監督: Kubota Yasutaka (窪田康高) - Ishī Akiharu (石井明治)
EP 07
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Komura Kōji (小村方宏治) Director/演出: Komura Kōji (小村方宏治) Animation Director/作画監督: Shin’no Ryōta (新野量太) - Morita Fumi (森田 史)
EP 08
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Satō Yūzō (佐藤雄三) Director/演出: Mori Daiki (森 大貴) Animation Director/作画監督: Yamaguchi Asuka (山口飛鳥)
Ep 09
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Satō Yūzō (佐藤雄三) Director/演出: Mori Daiki (森 大貴) - Ninomiya Takeshi (二宮壮史) Animation Director/作画監督: Yamaguchi Asuka (山口飛鳥)
EP 10
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Urasawa Naoki (荒川直樹) Director/演出: Ninomiya Takeshi (二宮壮史) Animation Director/作画監督: Ōsaka Ryōta (古川良太) - Shin’no Ryōta (新野量太) - Morita Fumi (森田 史)
EP 11
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Itatsu Yoshimi (板津匡覧) Director/演出: Itatsu Yoshimi (板津匡覧) Animation Director/作画監督: Nakamura Miyuki (中村深雪)
EP 12
Script/脚本: Kishimoto Taku (岸本 卓) Storyboard/絵コンテ: Nomura Kazuya (野村和也) Director/演出: Nomura Kazuya (野村和也) Animation Director/作画監督: Nakamura Miyuki (中村深雪) - Kubota Yasutaka (窪田康高)
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palmecho · 9 years ago
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music : kazuya kotani
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redondobeach · 13 years ago
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sakabarfukusuke · 2 years ago
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宮古島から雅歌小屋のマスターが急遽が唄いにきてくれます。 お時間ご都合あいましたら是非! president present R4 8/30 (火) START 19:00~ 第1回 不定期演奏親睦飲み会 [一応 LIVE♪】 料金 【¥2,000 1d付】 沖縄宮古島 ギターと唄 イラブマサユキ氏 BOROBORONS 東京ムサコ 主に太鼓 小谷和也氏 kazuya palamecho kotani 国立・酒場 FUKUSUKE 東京都国立市東1-15-22 国立サニービル3階 042-574-0445 [email protected] http://www.ameblo.jp/ sakabarfukusuke/ (酒場FUKUSUKE) https://www.instagram.com/p/ChKpBY4vHBd/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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palmecho · 9 years ago
Video
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music : kazuya kotani
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