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Anime song (アニメソング, anime songu, also shortened to anison (アニソン)) is a genre of music originating from Japanese pop music.Anime songs consist of theme, insert, and image songs for anime, manga, video game, and audio drama CD series, as well as any other song released primarily for the anime market, including music from Japanese voice actors.
The following is a list of albums mixed by Mexican DJ group Polymarchs and released on the Musart label. The first eight volumes of the series are High Energy tracks. From 1992 onward, the compilations are Electronica.
Charlotte is a 13-episode 2015 anime television series produced by P.A. Works and Aniplex and directed by Yoshiyuki Asai. The story was originally conceived by Jun Maeda, who also wrote the screenplay and composed the music with Hikarishuyo and the group Anant-Garde Eyes; Na-Ga provided the original character design.
One of the first viral nightcore videos was for "Rockefeller Street", the song by Getter Jaani that was chosen to represent Estonia at the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest.The song became an internet meme after the nightcore version was posted to YouTube by a user known as Andrea, who was known as an Osu! player.
B. Backlight (song) Balalaika (song) Baragoku Otome; Be a Flower; Be Mine! (Maaya Sakamoto song) Be the Naked; Beautiful Things (Ai song) Benkyō no Uta; Bling-Bang-Bang-Born
The anime soundtrack was collected in three main albums, released in 1995 and 1996. These were followed by several studio albums, collections and remixes. Sagisu also composed the soundtracks for the Rebuild of Evangelion tetralogy—a remake of the original series—and several derivative video games.
The Cowboy Bebop anime series was accompanied by a number of soundtrack albums composed by Yoko Kanno and Seatbelts, a diverse band Kanno formed to create the music for the series, with a principal focus in jazz. The soundtrack was released in the American market by Victor Entertainment, a subsidiary of JVC Kenwood.
[61] [62] In 2018, Japanese website Anime Anime asked its users which cartoon soundtracks they would like as their national anthem; "The Cruel Angel's Thesis" took third place. [63] The following year, it came second in a survey of the most-sung titles by the female audience on the website Merumo.