Compared to debut album?Prismic, Japanese pop star and former?Judy & Mary?frontwoman?Yuki's second solo album,?Commune, is a more cleanly produced and musically homogenous affair. Retaining her solo debut's mixture of J-Pop with a rocky edge, it nevertheless reins in the quirks that made its predecessor so appealing. This is not to say, however, that?Commune?is a bad album. Each track contains its fair share of hooks and catchy choruses. The understated "Stand Up! Sister" is an odd choice for a single but grows with each listen, and "Rock'n'Roll Star" is as appealing a ballad as you will find in J-Pop, with more than its fair share of similarities to?Judy & Mary's much beloved "Kyoto." Hints of?Prismic's playful style remain in the eastern-tinged "Funky Fruits" and a dub reworking of the previous album's "Koibitoyo." Overall,?Commune?represents a clear solidifying of?Yuki's identity as a solo artist as well as her growing maturity as a songwriter; however, it also represents a disappointing shift away from the joyous eclecticism that characterized some of her early solo efforts.
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Compared to debut album?Prismic, Japanese pop star and former?Judy & Mary?frontwoman?Yuki's 更多>
Compared to debut album?Prismic, Japanese pop star and former?Judy & Mary?frontwoman?Yuki's second solo album,?Commune, is a more cleanly produced and musically homogenous affair. Retaining her solo debut's mixture of J-Pop with a rocky edge, it nevertheless reins in the quirks that made its predecessor so appealing. This is not to say, however, that?Commune?is a bad album. Each track contains its fair share of hooks and catchy choruses. The understated "Stand Up! Sister" is an odd choice for a single but grows with each listen, and "Rock'n'Roll Star" is as appealing a ballad as you will find in J-Pop, with more than its fair share of similarities to?Judy & Mary's much beloved "Kyoto." Hints of?Prismic's playful style remain in the eastern-tinged "Funky Fruits" and a dub reworking of the previous album's "Koibitoyo." Overall,?Commune?represents a clear solidifying of?Yuki's identity as a solo artist as well as her growing maturity as a songwriter; however, it also represents a disappointing shift away from the joyous eclecticism that characterized some of her early solo efforts.