Music
「健忘症」
| TRACK | TITLE | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 跡なし | |
| 2 | 聞いてはいけない、言ってはいけない | |
| 3 | 光速 | |
| 4 | 文句、文句 | |
| 5 | 間違い | |
| 6 | 健忘症 | |
| 7 | 言葉はハートを刺す刀になる | |
| 8 | 今 | |
| 9 | 住んでいない | |
| 10 | 後悔しない | |
| 11 | 結果 | |
| 12 | What I Deserve |
About this album
Prose is easy. Prose is natural.
I've had a lot of practice with prose. It's almost as easy as breathing. So too with songwriting. Chord progressions, melodies, arrangements -- I'm old hat.
But verse? Verse requires concentration, stamina, patience, time. Real life squeezes most of those things out.
I was able to lay down dozens of tracks in a year's time. The words were much slower to follow.
So with 「健忘症」 (Kenboushou, or Amnesia), I decided to reverse the operating procedure -- lyrics first, then music.
Since I didn't know how the music would sound, I gave myself I gimmick -- I would use Japanese titles for all the songs. When I finally got around to writing the music, I was in the mood to make it sound like an alt-country album.
When was the last time anyone saw an alt-country album with Japanese song titles?
「健忘症」 was also a significant test. Until then, I had a backlog of ideas and old songs that were fleshed out, edited, repurposed. This album would be the first of entirely new material since college.
![[「健忘症」] [「健忘症」]](/images/_covers/_exm_front_200_kenboushou.jpg)