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Mizérable (EP)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mizérable
EP by
ReleasedMay 12, 1999
Recorded1999
Studio(Recording Studio)
NRG Recording
Stagg Street st.
Skip Saylor
Sound Chamber
Groovin'Art st.
GenreArt rock, symphonic rock, progressive rock
Length20:16
LabelNippon Crown
ProducerGackt
Gackt chronology
Mizérable
(1999)
Mars
(2000)
Singles from Mizérable
  1. "Mizérable"
    Released: July 9, 1999
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Sputnikmusic[1]

"Mizérable" is the debut extended-play or mini album[2] of Japanese singer-songwriter Gackt, released on May 12, 1999, by Nippon Crown. It marked his solo debut, four months after he left Malice Mizer, immediately gaining success reaching second position on the Oricon Albums Chart.

All of the album's lyrics were written and music composed and produced by Gackt himself, and so it remained in all his albums. Musically incorporating violin, piano and modern rock instruments, with mixed pop-art rock sound, and recognizable emotional-metaphorical lyrics, the album suggested his future musical expression.[1]

Summary

[edit]

In 1999, the 26-year-old Gackt was living in Tokyo, and trying to set up his solo project. He was joined by his fellow Cains:Feel members, You Kurosaki who became the rhythmic guitarist and violinist and Ren Aoba who became the bassist of his live supporting band, also the other, not-known members. Of them only Masa Shinozaki continued to be part of the support band. In February, Gackt travelled in Los Angeles, U.S. and France, to complete recording and filming.[3] In April, he held his first concerts in 10 months called Gackt Easter Live - Resurrection, which was held in the Omiya Arche. It was a small event where he performed the song "Mizerable" live for the first time, as well talked with fans and announced the upcoming national tour.

The song "Mizerable" being the title song from the mini-album, was released one month later. This was first released as a single box containing a mini CD with the song and instrumental track, along VHS of the title song's promotional video and making of. Also nine days later a mini CD single version was released, containing no VHS. Also the song "Story" was re-recorded and released as a single titled "Saikai ~Story~" on August 30, 2000. Both songs were included on the 2004 compilation, The Sixth Day: Single Collection.

Release

[edit]

The album was released on May 12, 1999, by Nippon Crown. In the fourth counting week of May it reached number two on the Oricon chart, with sales of 163,970 copies. In the upcoming week, it was at number ten respectively, with sales of 28,380 copies. It charted for 12 weeks,[4] and with sales of 252,670 copies, it was the 95th best selling album of the year.[citation needed]

From the album were released two singles, "Mizérable", and a re-recording of "Story" titled "Saikai ~Story~", but is not considered the album's official single. The first single "Mizérable" reached number three on the second counting week of July, with sales of 65,530 copies. In the upcoming week, it was at number fifteen, with sales of 20,230 copies. It charted for 9 weeks,[5] and sold over 116,771 copies.[6] The second single "Saikai ~Story~" reached number seven on the second counting week of September 2000, with sales of 60,510 copies. It charted for 6 weeks,[5] and sold over 91,200 copies.

Track listing

[edit]

All lyrics are written by Gackt C.; all music is composed by Gackt C. (except "M-2" with Yohei Shimada)

No.TitleLength
1."Mizérable"4:55
2."Story"5:38
3."Leeca"5:37
4."Lapis ~Prologue~"4:02

Album credits

[edit]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Gackt: Mizerable (review)". Sputnikmusic. May 19, 2015. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  2. ^ "Mizerable: Gackt". HMV Japan (in Japanese). Lawson Entertainment. Retrieved December 3, 2023. マリス・ミゼル脱退後、早くもファーストミニアルバムをリリースするGackt. ピアノやヴァイオリンの豊かな旋律が、Gacktの歌声とリンクして高貴な音を表現する. マリス・ミゼルから、一人のシンガーに移り変わったGacktがどのように変化を遂げたのか、このミニアルバムで窺い知る事が出来る.
  3. ^ Gackt, Camui (2003). Jihaku: Gackt (in Japanese). 光文社 ( Kobunsha). ISBN 4-334-97412-0.
  4. ^ "Gackt albums on Oricon" (in Japanese). Oricon. Archived from the original on 2013-06-05. Retrieved November 28, 2012.
  5. ^ a b "Gackt singles on Oricon" (in Japanese). Oricon. Archived from the original on 2012-11-08. Retrieved November 28, 2012.
  6. ^ "Gackt、幻の楽曲がついにCD化!" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2006-12-27. Retrieved December 5, 2012.