Although the typical Hisaishi-sound is occasionally coming to the surface, it is interesting that Hisaishi uses a lot of synthie-sounds for this score, accompanied with a strong performance of singer Hiroko Yakushimaru. The whole soundtrack is a result of a time when Japans economy was soaring high, and so were the possibilities and expectations of the middle class. “The Tragedy of Higeki” may hint on darker sides of Japans Golden Age, but the powerful, optimistic vibes shine strongly through this soundtrack. Personally I could do without the japanese dialogues, but over all this is a fine and nostalgic 1980ies-score. Thanks for sharing!
9 comments
Thank you so! Cheers
Thank you 🙂
Thanks!
Gracias por compartirla.
Appreciate the share Admin 🙂
Thank You So!
Thank you very much to Robert and Admin.
this is something else
thank you!!!
Although the typical Hisaishi-sound is occasionally coming to the surface, it is interesting that Hisaishi uses a lot of synthie-sounds for this score, accompanied with a strong performance of singer Hiroko Yakushimaru. The whole soundtrack is a result of a time when Japans economy was soaring high, and so were the possibilities and expectations of the middle class. “The Tragedy of Higeki” may hint on darker sides of Japans Golden Age, but the powerful, optimistic vibes shine strongly through this soundtrack. Personally I could do without the japanese dialogues, but over all this is a fine and nostalgic 1980ies-score. Thanks for sharing!