|

New Especia: “We Are Especia ~ Naki Nagara Dancing”

Note: This will be the final regular update around these parts for a bit…starting tomorrow (hopefully!) we will share MBM’s top 20 Japanese albums of the year. And then we will go on a vacation where posts will be more infrequent. Fittingly, we end with Especia.

Osaka idol outfit Especia – who take cues from ’80s city pop and ’90s acid jazz sonically, and vaporwave visually – recently announced they signed a major-label deal with VERSIONMUSIC, under Victor, and will release their major-label-debut EP Primera this February. This is, immediately, good news – Especia have created some of the best J-pop of the last few years, capped off by this year’s Gusto. More exposure and opportunities…and budget…via a bigger label is an obvious plus.

Yet worries surface, as ridiculous as that seems (especially because we are talking about idols, built for mainstream attention). A bigger label means more micro management, and the first taste of Primera’s “We Are Especia ~ Naki Nagara Dancing” hints that this is already under way. Mainly, the video is only available through Yahoo! Japan’s Gyao! video service…only a major label in Japan would think “the best way to get this outfit over to a bigger audience is to limit them to one site.” The video, meanwhile, is a bit less wonky than what came before…instead of weather reports or glossy vegetables, we get faked live-show footage. The Parental-Advisory bit is good, but the rest of this is unremarkable.

If this sounds like goofy fan behavior…well, it probably is, as Especia is the only idol group going now where I’m willing to admit I start acting like your typical “stan” (ugh), give or take Perfume. But spirits remain upbeat…especially when I slap myself and remember “this is great for them! They probably get more dough! Good!”…after listening to the song. Which strikes a decent balance between major-label intro and Especia doing their thing. The first half is a slog – it is pure set up, introducing the group at the speed of a pre-credit info scroll – but then it opens up into an easy-going sway where the group do their thing over something that isn’t quite as brash as some of Gusto’s finer moments…but plenty good. And they introduce some central sonic ideas…the sax solo…and do throw in one exciting development with the rough-neck “what’s my *bleeeeeeep* name? section.

So yeah…who knows where this will go, but that’s part of the fun. And here’s Especia’s pitch for the mainstream listeners of Japan. Watch it here.

Similar Posts

  • New House Of Tapes: “Noise Attack”

    最近ツイッターで、ダンスミュージックに踊る事とセックスする事意外の目的を求めるのはおかしい、みたいな内容の投稿を見ました。でも、全てがそうというわけでは決してないです。名古屋のHouse Of Tapesも勿論違った目的を見いだしていて、彼等の新曲、”Noise Attack” はその名の通りすごく細かいディテールが詰め込まれていて、取っ付きにくさは否めないものの、それを理解するためについつい何回もリピートしてしまう、中毒性のあるトラックです。別の新曲”For Rainbow“はミニマル・ハウスのような、実験性があまり聴けない曲なのですが、”Noise Attack”のインパクトはやっぱり強烈な物があります。テレビのノイズのようなサウンドで始まり、曲を通して大部分にそのノイズがバックグラウンドに存在しています。その次に入ってくるのが良い意味で気持ちの悪いシンセで、ビートがそれに続いて入ってきます。そして、違うリズム感を持つ同系等のシンセが入ってきて、曲のムードが予想以上に不快に展開していきます。決して尖っているわけではなくどこかスムーズで、どことなくギャスパー・ノエの映画のような雰囲気を持ったこの曲は、きっと病み付きになるでしょう。視聴は以下から。

  • New Metoronori: Veil

    It’s about being surprised in the best ways possible. This, Metoronori’s third album, finds her continuing to occupy her own little, strange corner of the online music world. She creates fragile little sonic worlds…whirring synths, the occasional glance of something a bit shinier, a very annoying timer sound on “III”…that could seemingly collapse from a…

  • |

    Bo En Remixes Negicco: “Let’s Meet At The Festival”

    No stranger to remixing for J-pop acts, England’s bo en remixed Niigata trio Negicco’s song “Let’s Meet At The Festival.” The original version is a solid bit of pop — better than the leak-backing group’s newest songs, but not touching the material on this year’s Rice & Snow, one of the favorites for 2015’s finest…