Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Nightbird

 
Album Review: Nightbird
 

  • Artist: Yanni
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: October 28, 1997
  • Type: Compilation (best of), Instrumental
  • Genre: New Age

Review

This collection of rare and never before released recordings by Yanni sparkles with imagination and flair and is sure to put a pulse in the bloodstream of even the casual listener. Being a skeptic, one will find a soothing yet orchestral wonder within the framework of each of Yanni's recordings. Ranging from a variety of instruments, the pianist/composer extraordinaire continues to bring charm and romance to life in his art. Presented here on Nightbird are seven dramatic and scintillating recordings, good for morning rise, airplane trips, car travel, and dreamy night escapades. "Nightbird" radiates with scorching guitars and bouncy conga percussion. Throughout the record is Yanni's assertive direction and piano lines. "Chasing Shadows" is a murky, haunting number dealing with the lives of those too quick on their feet, not giving themselves enough time to slow down, enjoy life and catch up with their shadow, and enjoying one's true sense of self. "Dance with a Stranger" leaves the listener to ponder about chance encounters and failed romances, or should-have-beens, to the excitement and anticipation of a new love interest. The plethora of instruments and sounds used in this record is mind-boggling, and it's fun for the listener just to sit back, kick up their feet, and dream through all the different impressions and colors of sound and timbre. Yanni does it again successfully, with gripping yet soothing, reflective music for the underpaid, overworked person at the end of the day. ~ Shawn M. Haney, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
North Shore of Matsushima Yanni Yanni (5:10)
Point of Origin Yanni Yanni (5:58)
Within Attraction Yanni Yanni (4:11)
Dance with a Stranger Yanni Yanni (5:02)
Chasing Shadows Yanni Yanni (5:38)
Days of Summer Yanni Yanni (4:25)
Nightbird Yanni Yanni (6:01)

Credits

Yanni (Piano), Yanni (Keyboards), Yanni (Main Performer)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: Nightbird (Transformers)
Top
Nightbird
Decepticon
Function Ninja
Alternate Modes None
Series Transformers: Generation 1

Nightbird is a fictional character, notable as the first female robot character seen in the Transformers cartoon series. She appeared in the second season episode Enter the Nightbird.

Nightbird is a human construct with a single form and thus not actually a Transformer herself. Created by Dr. Fujiyama ("the famous scientist," according to Cliffjumper), she was a non-transforming ninja robot. Fujiyama originally intended her to be used for research purposes and limited her abilities accordingly. However, when he presented her at a university talk, the Decepticons grabbed her, despite an Autobot presence. After the Decepticons had left, carrying Nightbird away, Optimus Prime promised Dr. Fujiyama that she would be retrieved unharmed.

Meanwhile, Megatron had Bombshell make several alterations to Nightbird, removing the limitations Fujiyama had set and boosting her power supply. Many people argue that Nightbird was merely a programmed automaton because when Bombshell slips a chip into her head, he says, "I love warping minds for you, Megatron." Starscream scoffs at Nightbird, who promptly beats him in return. Megatron reveals his plan: Nightbird is going to retrieve the World Energy Source chip from Teletraan I.

Nightbird sneaks into the Ark, revealing that she is equipped with climbing skills and a grappling hook. She does not move silently but quietly enough that none of the Transformers or even Spike notice her moving around. She happens across the Autobots' new security system (floor sensor pads installed at the beginning of the episode), and defeats it by magnetizing her feet and walking up a wall and along the ceiling. Sneaking through the base, she finds the chip and rips it out of Teletraan I, which sets off an alarm and knocks out the lights. She encounters Mirage in the dark and beats him easily, displaying martial arts skills. When a group of Autobots chase her into a corner, she tries to chase them off by converting her hands into whirling sawblades and throwing them at the Autobots. When that doesn't work she performs a vanishing trick by whirling around, she suddenly creates a burst of light that blinds them long enough for her to escape.

The Autobots track Nightbird through the countryside as she heads back towards the Decepticon land base she was altered at. Prime hits her with a stun beam, but when Bluestreak approaches, she jumps up and takes him down. Optimus then approaches her, cautioning the other Autobots not to fire at her, since they've promised not to harm her. Nightbird attacks him, knocking him down, when someone shoots her laser sword out of her hand. She leaves the sword and grabs Prime's rifle and takes off, literally jumping off a cliff and disappearing when pursued by the Autobots.

Nightbird continues to evade the Autobots, coming up with counters to their every attack, until she's finally trapped in an energy net. In the meantime, Starscream has injudiciously punched Megatron in response to his continued taunting suggestions of replacing Starscream with Nightbird, and been locked up.

The Decepticons attack the Autobots, freeing Nightbird in the process, and for a moment it looks as though the battle will go to them, no small thanks to Nightbird's defeat of five or so Bots. However, Starscream has freed himself and proceeds to stun Nightbird with his null-ray. She collapses into Prime's hands lifelessly, and Megatron calls off the Decepticons to chase after Starscream.

In the final scenes, Nightbird is locked up by Dr. Fujiyama, while Prime says he's glad that she's deprogrammed, and as Dr. Fujiyama claimed, safely locked up forever. But in the final shot we see her angrily narrowing eyes glowing a fierce yellow, making it unclear just how deprogrammed she is.

3H Enterprises

There were two Nightbird cameos in the Transformers comic books. The first was in the convention comic book series where an army of robot ninja who looked exactly like Nightbird were responsible for the death of an adult Daniel Witwicky and the Autobot Wheelie.

Dreamwave Productions

The second was in the Dreamwave ongoing G1 comic #7 'Infestation' where a movie theatre was playing the movie "Enter the Nightbird"; Nightbird herself was seen surrounded by mechanoid ninja and destroying them.


 
 
Learn More
The Transformers: Enter the Nightbird (1985 Science Fiction Film)
Nightbird (2005 Album by Erasure)
Nightbird [Bonus Track] (2005 Album by Erasure)

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nightbird (Transformers)" Read more

 

Mentioned in