- Source: Me Me Me
- Source: Me. Me. Me.
- Source: Me! Me! Me!
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me may refer to:
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me (album), a 1998 album by antifolk singer/songwriter Major Matt Mason USA
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me (band), an English supergroup
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me, a 2011 musical feature-length film written and produced by Jonathan King
"me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me" (song), a 2007 song by Welsh rock band Kids in Glass Houses, from their EP E-Pocalype!
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me., a 1995 album by American indie rock band Air Miami
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me!, a 2009 album by Japanese-American recording artist Joe Inoue
"me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me!me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me!me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me!", a song by TeddyLoid and Daoko, and the third episode of the Japan Animator Expo
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. (also stylized as me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me.) is the only album by the American indie rock band Air Miami, released in 1995. It was recorded after the breakup of Unrest, the former band of guitarist Mark Robinson and bassist Bridget Cross. The band promoted the album with a North American tour that included shows with Throwing Muses.
Production
Recorded during two weeks in May 1995 at Criteria Studios, in Miami, the album was produced by Guy Fixsen; Gabriel Stout played drums. It was the band's intention to produce an album of short songs. "Afternoon Train" is a re-recording of the final Unrest single.
Critical reception
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. was met with generally favourable reviews. The Washington Post wrote that Robinson and Cross "trade lead vocals on 13 short songs that combine bubblegum tunefulness ('Neely'), with lounge-ballad melancholy ('Seabird'), evanescent soundscapes ('Reprise') and occasional space-rock bleeps." Trouser Press thought that "the bubblegum aftertaste left by segments of me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. is a bit too strong when Robinson indulges his propensity for creating inconsequential chantalongs like 'World Cup Fever', but he offsets that with reams of bracing, Fire Engines-styled guitar and a guileless new wave sensibility (see 'Dolphin Expressway') that should sway all but the most diehard Anglophobe." The Austin Chronicle deemed the album "a heady mix of danceable trivialities and serious longing." The Tampa Tribune concluded that "Air Miami soars through a universe of pop styles with a surfeit of panache and a minimum of bombast... Pure pleasure—clean, clever, surprising."
Spin called Robinson "one of the few men in indieland who can hold a vocal melody," and wrote that "the guitar work here is as nimble as Dean Wareham's." The Post and Courier determined that "Robinson's avant pop/punk songs are fun, and serve as great set-ups for Cross' more oblique offerings." The St. Louis Post-Dispatch labeled the album "alternately fun and pretentious, like most 4AD stuff," writing that "faced with the choice of copping either atmospheric Velvets-style arrangements or Wire-esque sprinters, Air Miami did the all-American thing and riffed off both."
AllMusic wrote that, "unsurprisingly, early drum machines provide percussion as well, a sonic signifier that also fits nicely more often than not ... me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me, me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me, me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me is a simpler musical pleasure than most." MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide opined that me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me. "doesn't have the giddiness of the Unrest work, but it is sweet to listen to."
Legacy
Time Out considered the album cover to be one of the 40 best of the 1990s. "Seabird" was covered by Maria Somerville for the 2021 4AD compilation Bills & Aches & Blues.
Track listing
References
me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! is the first full-length album by Japanese-American recording artist Joe Inoue, originally released as a standard release and a limited edition release containing a DVD of music videos on April 8, 2009. me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me! peaked at number 86 on the Oricon Weekly Album Charts, remaining on the charts for only one week. As with all of Inoue's music, he mixes, arranges, and performs on every track.
Track listing
All songs are written, composed, and performed by Joe Inoue.
"Closer (Royal Ver.)" – 3:24
"Reiji (Twenty Four)" (零時~TWENTY FOUR~, "Midnight (Twenty Four)") – 2:32
"Maboroshi (Illusion)" – 4:39
"Party Night (Odoritari Night)" – 2:48
"Into Oblivion" – 3:06
"One Man Band (Symphonicated Ver.)" – 3:35
"Hitomi (He Told me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me)" (瞳~HE TOLD me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">ME~, "Eyes (He Told me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">me" target="_blank">Me)") – 3:11
"Hannah" – 3:26
"Gravity (Sunset Ver.)" – 3:06
"Kuruma" (車, "Car") – 2:51
"Afterglow" – 2:40
"Haru" (春, "Spring") – 3:09
"Hello! (Album Mix)" – 3:45
"Walking After You" (Acoustic)"
= Limited edition DVD
="Nowhere" (Music Video)
"Hummingbird" (Music Video)
"Hello!" (Music Video)
"Closer" (Music Video)
"Maboroshi" (Music Video)
Inoue Joe Artist Documentary
Joe TV with Music Videos
References
External links
Joe Inoue's official website (in Japanese)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Killing Me Inside
- Save Me (seri televisi 2017)
- Me Before You (film)
- Take Me Out Indonesia
- Bring Me the Horizon
- Kill Me Love Me
- Face Me
- Melting Me Softly
- Meet Me Next Christmas
- Now You See Me (film)
- Me
- Me Me Me (band)
- Me Me Me
- Me. Me. Me.
- Me! Me! Me!
- Against Me!
- Me!
- Me Me Me (album)
- Me, Me, Me... and the Others
- Windows Me
Fair Play (2023)
After Everything (2023)
The Avenging Eagle (1978)
Troll (1986)
I Sell the Dead (2008)
RocketMan (1997)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.