Hide_Your_Face

<i>Hide Your Face</i>

Hide Your Face

1994 studio album by hide


Hide Your Face is the debut album by Japanese musician hide, released on February 23, 1994. It reached number 1 on the Oricon Albums Chart and was certified Double Platinum by the RIAJ for sales over 500,000 copies. It was named one of the top albums from 1989-1998 in a 2004 issue of the music magazine Band Yarouze.

Quick Facts Hide Your Face, Studio album by hide ...

Overview

hide embarked on a solo career in 1993 due to the downtime in X Japan. Initially wanting to hire several different vocalists because he was unsure of his own voice, he eventually began taking vocal lessons from Toshi's coach and sang the material himself.[1]

The song "Frozen Bug '93 (Diggers Version)" is a remixed version of "Frozen Bug", a song that hide wrote and performed with Luna Sea members J and Inoran, under the band name M*A*S*S, for the 1993 compilation Dance 2 Noise 004.[2] Wanting to contrast something unusual with a pop background, hide hired Yukinojo Mori to pen the lyrics to his first two A-side singles. As a kid, hide was fond of Bow Wow's 1982 album Warning from Stardust, where the A-side songs had lyrics in English and the B-side in Japanese. Liking the Japanese lyrics better, hide only realized Mori was their author afterwards.[1] Together with the music for "Frozen Bug", "Eyes Love You" and "50% & 50%" are the only songs hide released for his solo career that he did not write himself.

The album's cover art features a reproduction of a mask, originally created by H. R. Giger, by Screaming Mad George and Joanne Bloomfield.[3]

Hide Your Face was re-released on the Japan only format SHM-CD on December 3, 2008.

Reception

Hide Your Face reached number 1 on the Oricon Albums Chart.[4] The 2008 re-release reached number 223.[4] The album was certified Gold by the RIAJ in March 1994, Platinum in January 1995, and Double Platinum in February 2020 for sales over 500,000.[5]

The album was named one of the top albums from 1989-1998 in a 2004 issue of the music magazine Band Yarouze.[6]

Track listing

More information No., Title ...

All tracks are written by hide, except tracks 4 and 15 lyrics by Yukinojo Mori, and track 9 music by M*A*S*S

Personnel

Main artist

  • hide – vocals, guitar, arranger, producer

Musicians and production

  • Kazuhiko Inada – co-producer, synthesizer programming
  • Terry Bozzio – drums on tracks 2, 4, 10, 11, 14
  • Mitsuko Akai – drums on tracks 8, 13
  • Junji Ikehata – drums on track 15
  • T. M. Stevens – bass on tracks 2, 4, 10, 11, 14
  • Michiaki Suzuki – bass on track 12
  • Toshihiro Nara – bass on track 15
  • Rich Breen – Rhodes on track 6, recording engineer, mixing engineer
  • Neil Larson – organ on track 11
  • Jerry Hey, Gary E. Grant, William F. Reichenbach – horn on track 11
  • Maxine Waters, Julia Waters, Carmen Twillie – chorus on track 11
  • Byron Berlinefiddle on track 15
  • Tsuneo Tomono – recording engineer, mixing engineer on tracks 6, 10, 15 (band section), 16
  • Kazushige Yamazaki – mastering engineer
Personnel per the album's liner notes.[7]

Cover versions

Yoshiki composed a piece based on "Psychommunity Exit" as the intro for the 1999 hide tribute album Tribute Spirits.[8] American bassist T.M. Stevens, who plays on the album, recorded a cover of "Blue Sky Complex" for his 1999 album Radioactive. Nightmare guitarist Hitsuji covered "D.O.D. (Drink Or Die)" for Tribute II -Visual Spirits-, while Dezert covered it for Tribute III -Visual Spirits-. Both albums were released on July 3, 2013.[9] The Cherry Coke$ also recorded a version of the same song for Tribute VII -Rock Spirits-, released on December 18, 2013.[10] "D.O.D. (Drink Or Die)" was covered by Flow firstly at Mixed Lemoned Jelly 2016 in Maihama Amphitheater then recorded the studio version for June 6, 2018 Tribute Impulse album.[11]


References

  1. Ichikawa, Tetsushi (December 1993). "Interview with hide". 音楽と人 [Ongaku to Hito]. Shinko Music Entertainment Co., Ltd.
  2. "H.R. Giger's official website". giger.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-05-21.
  3. "hideのアルバム売り上げランキング" (in Japanese). Oricon. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  4. "Japanese album certifications" (Enter Hide into the アーティスト then select 検索) (in Japanese). Recording Industry Association of Japan. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  5. "Top 44 Albums from 1989 - 1998". jame-world.com. 2004-05-09. Retrieved 2013-03-08.
  6. Hide Your Face liner notes, 1994-02-23. Retrieved 2013-05-12
  7. "hide TRIBUTE SPIRITS". amazon.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2012-07-07.
  8. "Two hide Tribute Albums to be Released Simultaneously!". musicjapanplus.jp. Retrieved 2013-05-05.
  9. "hide Tribute VII -Rock SPIRITS-". cdjapan.jp. Retrieved 2013-12-15.

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