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Capsule

 
Artist: Capsule

Group Members:

Nakata Yasutaka
  • Genres: Electronica

Biography

Japanese electronic pop duo Capsule formed in 1997 with Nakata Yasutaka acting as composer, arranger, and lyricist, and Koshijima Toshiko providing vocals. Given the time of the band's formation, it is perhaps understandable that their earlier work provokes frequent comparisons with the then popular and influential "Shibuya-kei" movement, whose most well-known proponents include Cornelius, Pizzicato 5, and Fantastic Plastic Machine.

Capsule's debut album, High Collar Girl, was released in 2001, showcasing many of the bossa nova, French pop, jazz, and naive electronic pop influences that were defining features of the Shibuya-kei genre. Yasutaka formed his own Contemode label for Capsule's work as well as other like-minded artist's, under the aegis of Yamaha Music Communications in 2003 and since then, the group has maintained a fairly prolific rate of output, releasing one or two albums a year. 2004's S.F. Sound Furniture saw the group's concept expanding to include the concept of music as a lifestyle accessory, with a retro-futurist visual manifesto displayed in the short film/music video of "Portable Kuko," which was later adapted into a trilogy with the songs "Space Station No.9," from the 2005's SF-themed concept album NEXUS 2060 and "Soratobu Toshikeikaku," which appeared on the same year's L.D.K. Lounge Designers Killer album. Around this time, Yasutaka was also becoming well known as a producer for other acts, and 2006 saw the major-label breakthrough of the Yasutaka-produced idol-pop group Perfume, featuring heavy use of vocoders and dance, house, and electro influences borrowed more from groups like Daft Punk than groups like Pizzicato 5. Many of these sounds had been pioneered by Yasutaka on Capsule's work the previous year, and the national success of Perfume catapulted Capsule into the public eye.

Subsequent albums pushed the electro influence more and more to the fore, with Fruits Clipper in 2006 and Sugarless Girl in 2007 merging the group's Shibuya-kei lounge pop with guitars and dance beats. 2008's More! More! More! saw Capsule's work diverging noticeably with Yasutaka's as a producer, with a much harder electro sound than that displayed on the more mainstream Perfume album, Game, earlier the same year. ~ Ian Martin, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Capsule (group)
Top
Capsule
Origin Kanazawa, Japan
Genres Shibuya-kei
Indie Pop
Picopop
Electropop
Electro House
Years active 2001-present
Labels Contemode
Associated acts Perfume, Coltemonikha, Meg
Members
Yasutaka Nakata
Toshiko Koshijima

Capsule (カプセル, kapuseru?), stylised as "capsule", is a Japanese electronic music duo consisting of vocalist Toshiko Koshijima and producer Yasutaka Nakata.

Contents

Music

capsule formed in November 1997, after Nakata Yasutaka and Koshijima Toshiko met at the TEENS'MUSIC FESTIVAL in the Hokuriku area convention when they were 17 years old. Their first single was "Sakura", released in March of 2001 on YAMAHA MUSIC COMMUNICATIONS. Their first album, "High Collar Girl", is significantly different from their later works; in that it doesn't involve nearly as much synthizer or contain futuristic/electronic sounds.[1]

Capsule are frequently referred to as "neo-Shibuya-kei" due to their stylistic similarities, both aesthetically and musically, to acts from the Shibuya-kei movement of the '90's, most notably Pizzicato Five. Their music contains elements of bossa nova, lounge, breakbeat, and most recently electro.

Capsule is known for frequently licensing their music for use on television programs in Japan, such as Utawara Hot Hit 10, Hello! Morning, and Nankai Paradise. [2] Their song Portable Airport (remix) also features in promos for The Comedy Channel on Australian pay TV. The album More! More! More! reached place 6 in its first week on the Oricon weekly album chart, and place 3 on the daily chart, marking their first time in the top 10.

Discography

Maxi singles

  1. [2001.03.28] Sakura (さくら?)
  2. [2001.07.04] Hanabi (花火?)
  3. [2001.10.17] Tokyo Kissa (東京喫茶?)
  4. [2002.08.21] music controller
  5. [2002.11.20] Plastic Girl (プラスチックガール?)
  6. [2003.05.21] Candy Cutie (キャンディー キューティー?)
  7. [2004.02.04] Retro Memory (レトロメモリー?)

12" analog singles

  1. [2003.02.20] Cutie Cinema pre-Play
  2. [2003.05.21] Tone Cooking
  3. [2003.09.17] Idol Fancy
  4. [2004.05.21] Portable Airport
  5. [2005.02.02] Space Station No.9
  6. [2005.08.06] Aeropolis
  7. [2006.04.19] Jelly
  8. [2006.12.13] Starry Sky
  9. [2007.09.05] Capsule rmx EP
  10. [2007.11.07] Musixxx / I'm Feeling You
  11. [2008.10.08] Jumper

Albums

  1. [2002.09.17] High Collar Girl (ハイカラガール?)
  2. [2003.03.19] Cutie Cinema Replay
  3. [2003.11.09] phony phonic
  4. [2004.06.09] S.F. sound furniture (8,066 copies sold)
  5. [2005.02.09] Nexus-2060
  6. [2005.09.21] L.D.K. Lounge Designers Killer
  7. [2006.05.10] Fruits Clipper (5,845 copies sold)
  8. [2007.02.21] Sugarless GiRL (14,105 copies sold)
  9. [2007.10.10] capsule rmx (6,036 copies sold)
  10. [2007.12.05] Flash Back (25,614 copies sold)
  11. [2008.11.19] More! More! More! (67,309 copies sold)
  12. [2009.08.26] Flash Best (31,306 copies sold)

See also

References

  1. ^ wiki.jstop.com, [1]
  2. ^ ja.wikipedia.org, capsule - Wikipedia

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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