A Shape of Light

A Shape of Light (full name A Shape of Light: A Silent Voice The Movie Original Soundtrack) is the title of an album by Japanese EBM musician and composer Kensuke Ushio which is the official movie soundtrack for Japanese animation movie A Silent Voice.

A Shape of Light
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedSeptember 14, 2016 (2016-09-14)
Recorded2016
StudioMaruna Studios, Tokyo; Kimken Studios
GenreSoundtrack
Length119:20
LabelPony Canyon
ProducerPony Canyon, Kensuke Ushio
Kensuke Ushio chronology
Ping Pong
(2014)
A Shape of Light
(2016)
Liz and the Blue Bird
(2018)
Alternative cover
The vinyl version [Shape A]

The Soundtrack contains 61 tracks on two CDs and has a running-time of about two hours. The album was released on September 14, 2016 via Pony Canyon. A western release was done in 2017 by Anime Limited in North America.[1]

A Shape of Light peaked at no. 74 on the Japanese Albums Chart where it lasted for about five weeks in the rankings.

Production history

Kensuke Ushio who creates EBM music under his moniker agraph. was announced to be the soundtrack's composer in May 2016 after he got asked to write the music for Kyoto Animation's anime movie A Silent Voice back in 2015.[2][3]

Most of the tracks were composed by Ushio himself while all tracks called inv are based on the Invention No. 1 in C mayor, BWV 772 originally composed by Johann Sebastian Bach.[4][5] Ushio worked alongside movie director Naoko Yamada which had a very similar point of view when it came across the concept of the film and music.[6] Kensuke Ushio described the movie as Shōyas story which deals about his contacts with other people and how treats them which was a universal theme when it cames to bring it out of context.[6] For working on the films' music Ushio was shown several scenarios. He stated that he put full effort in the recordings of the sounds.[6]

The movie soundtrack was recorded at the Maruni Studios in Tokyo. The track slt featured guest musician Yuji Katsui on violin. The mixing of the first disc was done by Hiroshi Kitashiro, while Ushio mixed the second CD himself. The mastering was done at Kimken Studios.[5]

In an interview Ushio stated he had not really worked on film scores that often before working on A Silent Voice's soundtrack.[3] Yamada who had known Ushio's music before contacted his management requesting his involvement in composing the soundtrack.[3] The work on the film's score began when most parts of the storyboard had to be elaborated.[3] The studio works ended when sound director Yuta Tsuruoka got the final musical concept and approved it.[3]

Background

Ushio wrote 82 tracks in total for the soundtrack. 61 made it on the official soundtrack while 50 tracks are listenable during the movie. Most of the tracks are written for piano.[3]

The tracks' titles on the first CD consist of three letters, with exceptions of the inv titles, van(var), lvs(var) and lit(var). The three -letter titles are identification codes created by Ushio himself while composing the titles and which he got feedback for.[7] Ushio decided that he would use his identification codes as song names instead of renaming them in order to tell the listener their possible meanings. Instead he wanted the listeners to came up with their own interpretations.[7]

Even though those codes aren't arbitrary. So htb on the first CD stands for heart beat which is the first track on the second CD and another version of that track.[7] Ushio describes the inv tracks as the most important songs on the soundtrack.[8] He stated that Bach's Invention is splitable in three parts as well as the movie's plot why every part got some inv tracks on it.[8]

Regarding the movie the inv title and their adaptions is an example of learning how to communicate and how Shōya made it throughout the movie to overcome his guilt in Elementary School and how he invented a new way of communication.[8] At the final scene on the movie where Shōya and Shōko are seen visiting the Highschool's culture festival the final part of Bach's Invention is played symbolising the end of Shōyas lession in communication.[8]

lit which is only played two times throughout the whole movie stands for Light. Ushio stated the movie is about reaching the light which is why the songs was played at the very end of the film.[7]

Tracklist

CD 1
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."tre"Kensuke Ushio01:48
2."inv(I.i)"Johann Sebastian Bach01:23
3."roh"Kensuke Ushio01:46
4."lvs"Kensuke Ushio02:06
5."inv(I.ii)"J.S. Bach01:12
6."rev"Kensuke Ushio01:34
7."inv(I.iii)"J.S. Bach01:19
8."lvs(var)"Kensuke Ushio01:26
9."thn"Kensuke Ushio00:49
10."lit"Kensuke Ushio00:51
11."bnw"Kensuke Ushio00:50
12."htb"Kensuke Ushio01:02
13."bll"Kensuke Ushio01:02
14."acc"Kensuke Ushio01:38
15."int"Kensuke Ushio01:21
16."flw"Kensuke Ushio01:36
17."mon"Kensuke Ushio00:58
18."maw"Kensuke Ushio01:06
19."inv(II.i)"J.S. Bach01:03
20."van"Kensuke Ushio02:25
21."inv(II.ii)"J.S. Bach00:46
22."inv(II.iii)"J.S. Bach01:02
23."sig"Kensuke Ushio01:30
24."aft"Kensuke Ushio02:18
25."inv(II.iv)"J.S. Bach00:53
26."flt"Kensuke Ushio01:40
27."prc"Kensuke Ushio02:24
28."pst"Kensuke Ushio02:09
29."inv(II.v)"J.S. Bach03:22
30."btf"Kensuke Ushio01:05
31."van(var)"Kensuke Ushio01:32
32."sus"Kensuke Ushio02:13
33."frc"Kensuke Ushio01:31
34."inv(II.vi)"J.S. Bach01:32
35."qut"Kensuke Ushio01:52
36."svg"Kensuke Ushio02:02
37."slt" (Yuji Katsui (Violine))Kensuke Ushio01:59
38."Invention No.1 in C mayor, BWV 772" (last part)J.S. Bach01:28
39."lit(var"Kensuke Ushio02:15
Total length:60:48
CD 2
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."heart beat"Kensuke Ushio01:39
2."round"Kensuke Ushio01:38
3."into the sparkle"Kensuke Ushio03:25
4."black and white"Kensuke Ushio02:44
5."(i can) say nothing"Kensuke Ushio02:23
6."night lights"Kensuke Ushio01:36
7."blue blur"Kensuke Ushio01:36
8."vignette"Kensuke Ushio02:33
9."narrow road"Kensuke Ushio03:54
10."welcome to the park"Kensuke Ushio00:58
11."is your hair real?"Kensuke Ushio01:55
12."laser"Kensuke Ushio04:43
13."macchina eco"Kensuke Ushio01:41
14."green"Kensuke Ushio02:39
15."sunlight"Kensuke Ushio03:24
16."sketch no.19"Kensuke Ushio01:45
17."sustain"Kensuke Ushio02:08
18."no one here"Kensuke Ushio03:37
19."your silent portrait"Kensuke Ushio01:28
20."fractal"Kensuke Ushio05:45
21."flare"Kensuke Ushio02:18
22."speed of light" (Music video on German DVD/BD version of A Silent Voice)Kensuke Ushio04:43
Total length:58:32

Critics

The soundtrack peaked at no. 74 in the Japanese Albums Chart at the week of September 14, 2016 where it was able to be for five weeks on the rankings.[9]

James Marsh of South China Morning Post wrote that the discordant sounding score by Ushio lays an unsettling layer on the complex sounding landscape of the film which brings the viewer nearer to Shōko Nishimiyas world's view.[10] In a movie review at Anime News Network Kevin Cirugeda wrote that Kensuke Ushio and Naoko Yamada worked closely together on the soundtrack resulting – excluding the licensed My Generation by The Who – in gentle piano sounds, ambient sounds and pure silence. There are no significant tracks instead the films as whole was described as a sensory experience where the sounds play as such of a role like the background music used in the movie.[11]

Readers of Anime UK News voted the soundtrack as Best Soundtrack at the Anime UK Reader′s Choice Awards alongside the musical score of The Ancient Magus' Bride.[12]

gollark: Communism will be eradicated.
gollark: I would join but I have a mere 613MB of free memory.
gollark: What were we talking about?
gollark: antimemetic < [REDACTED]
gollark: Joke's on you, I can decrypt the railguns by decrypting them 660.9 times with potatOS 5rot26.

References

  1. Andrew Osmond (2017-10-27). "Anime Limited Releasing Vinyl Soundtracks". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  2. Chrystalyn Hodgkins (2016-05-27). "A Silent Voice Anime Film Stars Miyu Irino, Saori Hayami". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  3. "Koe no Katachi: Interview with Kensuke Ushio". Manga Tokyo. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  4. Sven Raabe (2017-10-02). "Anime-Serien im Kino - Mein Abend mit der Suche nach Wiedergutmachung". Moviepilot.de. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  5. ""a silent voice the movie" original sound track: a shape of light [Shape B]". vgmdb.net. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  6. Interview mit Kensuke Ushio (Musik). In: A Silent Voice – Deluxe Edition. VIZ Media Switzerland SA (Kazé Anime), Berlin 2018, EAN 7630017513557.
  7. "ラストの曲は、京アニ近くの河原で泣きながら思いつきました――映画『聲の形』音楽・牛尾憲輔インタビュー" (in Japanese). news.ameba.jp. 2016-10-08. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  8. "Music Interview" (in Japanese). koenokatachi-movie.com. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  9. Charts: "JP".
  10. James Marsh (2017-04-17). "Film review: A Silent Voice – Japanese animation takes sensitive look at perils of teenage life". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  11. Kevin Cirugeda (2016-11-04). "A Silent Voice – Review". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  12. Teapot, Demelza (2018-01-24). "Announcing the Anime UK News Readers' Choice Awards Winners!". Anime UK News. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
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