Concert: First Live
Date of Recording: 19th May,
1996
Laser Disc: Front
|
Laser Disc: Lyrics Inlay
|
Laser Disc: Back |
Track
Listing: Boku-tachi no
Kotae ~Rule~
Shounen A-Z
Seishun Ni Riyuu Wa Iranai
American Rock Medley
(Black Night~House of the Rising Sun~You
Keep Me Hangin' On~Born To Be Wild)
Live Drama Scene (Sotsugyou
M)
Boku Datte Otoko Da Zo (Sakaguchi
Solo)
Rock & Roll Beethoven
(Hayashi Solo)
Otokogi (Ishikawa solo)
Uwasa No Rock Star (Okiayu
Solo)
Tsubasa Naki Sedai (Midorikawa
Solo)
Juudai Wa Paradaisu
Namida Ga Niji Ni Kawaru Made
~Girl~
Boku-tachi no Kotae
~Rule~ (Reprise)
General Review
I like the First Live a whole lot. I may even like it better than the
Equal Live because of the emphasis on real instruments and the
adventurous nature of the performance. There is a hell of a lot of life
in this show. And the banter between the artists is funny as hell,
especially when Midorikawa-san is on the stage. He's so cheeky.
Performer Review
~Midorikawa Hikaru
As I already said, he's so cheeky, and his teasing of Okiayu-san is
really funny.
Midorikawa has one solo song - Tsubasa Naki Sedai - which is one of the
best performances of the concert, in my opinion. He sings it really
well, full of life and fight. I really love Midorikawa-san's voice. I
don't care if other people don't - I think he's a star. Definitely a
top class performance.
In terms of his other parts, I love listening to him sing the opening
of "The House Of The Rising Sun." His voice is cute, his English
pronunciation is cuter...it just makes for a great moment all round.
I don't know how good his bass playing is, but he looks good with the
guitar either way :)
~Hayashi Nobutoshi
It's no secret that I consider this guy to have one of the best singing
voices among seiyuu at the current time and back in 1996 was no
exception to that rule. What I didn't realise until I saw him perform
his solo, Rock & Roll Beethoven, was quite how good a guitarist he
also was. Much much respect. I could listen to him sing and/or play
forever, to be honest. Somehow Rock and Roll Beethoven and the American
Rock Medley (his English pronunciation was quite impressive for House
of the Rising Sun) seem to be more on his spiritual wavelength than the
more Jpop tracks like Juudai Wa and Shounen A-Z. Not that he doesn't
pull them off - he does, and very well too, thank you. His voice can
cope with most styles of singing so there are no complaints on that
level. I just feel he's more at home with a guitar in his hand than he
is doing dance steps in sync!
~Okiayu Ryoutarou
Full props for the English pronunciation on "Keep Me Hanging On." Very,
very cool. I don't think Uwasa no Rock Star is Okiayu-san's best ever
live performance, but it's not terrible by any stretch of the
imagination. He has such a deep voice that it comes over better on the
more pensive songs...I think maybe he's at his best, though, in this
concert singing in English (!).
He's also very cute on stage - forgetting to introduce himself, and
being teased by Midorikawa a fair bit. I love the chemistry these guys
have...
I also like Okiayu-san with a guitar. That is one of the better parts
of Uwasa No Rock Star (which is a song I love, by the way). I really
sound like I'm ditching his performance and I don't mean to be because
it isn't bad. It just has a slightly wobbly beginning - overall it's
good :)
~Ishikawa Hideo
If this guy had any more energy he'd be marketable as an alternative to
battery power. I mean, Hayashi-san is pretty lively on stage, but I
think Ishikawa maybe takes the biscuit. His solo Otokogi is one of the
most lively of the whole concert. Oddly, though, I prefer Ishikawa's
voice on slower and more reflective numbers, so this one isn't a big
hit with me. But he does give it everything he has, and then some.
I think the problem is partly because Otokogi is a very Katou Yuusuke
kind of song, and he performs it (logically) in a very characteristic
Yuusuke way. Unfortunately I think Yuusuke is a dolt and I want to
shake/hit him most of the time I'm reading about or watching him. So
yeah. This really doesn't work so well for me.
Also was somewhat impressed with the percussion. I don't know how good
a percussionist he actually is, but he looked good behind the kit.
~Sakaguchi Daisuke
I have a real love-hate relationship with Sakaguchi Daisuke and his
role in E.M.U. I think he's a good seiyuu, and I think he's a really
fun character...on stage he's always involved, always bantering with
the others and he has a great personality and chemistry with the
others...so if he wasn't there it would be a fifth less sparkly a
performance. But I'm really not a fan of his voice - or maybe it's his
singing style that I'm not so fond of. It might be because he's trying
to be too much like Mikimarou at times, but it's a little 'cute' and it
takes him off key from time to time.
Despite that, Boku Datte Otoko Da Zo is probably the best solo song he
has. It is catchy, and even though it's not one of my favourites, it
bears listening to. He's also impressive in the American medley,
singing the opening to "Born to be Wild" (I think maybe this is his
better singing voice, when he's not trying to be Mikimarou but he's
just singing straight). Sakaguchi-san's talent really lies with acting,
though. There's not much more I can say about that.
Song Review
My favourite performance is probably
Seishun
ni Riyuu Wa Iranai, because it mixes live instrumentals with
solo sections of singing and it has a really beautiful tune anyway, so
it works really well. The general bouncy J-pop tracks that are probably
E.M.U's best known songs (
Boku-tachi
no Kotae, Juudai Wa Paradaisu, Shounen A-Z) are there too and
sung with gusto (and nicely in tune, which is always a worry for me
when it comes to live concerts!). The dancing is interesting at times,
but I think it's quite cute really.
Girl
makes for a really beautiful finale/encore song, because of the depth
and emotion in it.
The
American Rock Medley is a
live exclusive which wasn't released as far as I know on CD - which is
sort of a shame, although the challenge of singing in English did get
to the boys a little bit at times and there are a few interesting notes
in the chorus of
House of the Rising
Sun. That aside, though, the solo sections of the medley more
than make up for it and I have a LOT of respect for them daring to do
something so ambitious and out there in their first live. I really like
Hayashi and Midorikawa's opening to
House
of the Rising Sun - and the whole thing has a great rock feel to
it.
The solos are all well pulled off and the live drama is a nice touch
which is missing from the later Equal Live Tour.
The Drama Scene Live
This is so funny. It refers a lot to manga themes - Takagi's
cross-dressing, Arai and Mikimaro's "secret" among other things. And
there's some fuinny banter with breaking the fourth wall, too.
Hayashi-san claiming not to know who the hell "
Hayashi Nobutoshi" is and
explaining clearly to Ishikawa-san why he has to go feed the cats is a
scream...and Okiayu's Takagi is almost sinisterly narcissistic at
times. Honestly, they are all so good...I swear, I wish I could have
seen them do more scenes like this :D It's a rare thing to see it
actually acted rather than a read scripted drama, and they get points
for that too :D
Particular Highlight: The
American Medley. And Midorikawa-san relating how he likes sexy
voices...like Okiayu-san's...;)
Best Perfomances: Seishun Ni
Riyuu Wa Iranai, Tsubasa Naki Sedai, Rock & Roll Beethoven.
Overall Remarks
I need some of their energy! It's a really mixed concert, from sixties
American rock to nineties J-pop. Ambitious for a first live, but it
works for them. I like the way they think, and they're fun on stage,
too. Kudos. It would have been nice for them to end the encore with a
different song from Boku-tachi no Kotae, which they'd already performed
- but I have a feeling that at that point the E.M.U repertoire was a
little limited, so I won't hold it against them.