Crossover (Yoshinori Sunahara album)

Crossover is the debut solo studio album by Yoshinori Sunahara. It was released on Ki/oon Records on September 1, 1995.[1][2] Most of the album was created using samplers.[3]

Crossover
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 1, 1995 (1995-09-01)
GenreElectronic
Length74:39
LabelKi/oon Records
ProducerYoshinori Sunahara
Yoshinori Sunahara chronology
Crossover
(1995)
Take Off and Landing
(1998)

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
The Times7/10[4]

Charlie Porter of The Times gave the album a 7 out of 10, commenting that Sunahara's cover of Rah Band's "Clouds Across the Moon" is the best song on the album.[4]

Track listing

Japanese edition
No.TitleLength
1."MFRFM (Music for Robot for Music)"6:03
2."Stinger Stingray"7:05
3."Whirlpool"6:28
4."Silver Ripples"6:36
5."The Long Vowel"1:07
6."Huraloop"6:50
7."Muddy Water"6:34
8."Elegant World"10:28
9."Clouds Across the Moon"5:15
10."Overtime Work"7:10
11."Huraloop (Audio Active Remix)"5:47
12."MFRFM (Armed)"5:43
Total length:74:39
German edition
No.TitleLength
1."MFRFM (Music for Robot for Music)"6:03
2."Stinger Stingray"7:05
3."Whirlpool"6:28
4."Silver Ripples"6:36
5."The Long Vowel"1:07
6."Huraloop"6:50
7."Muddy Water"6:34
8."Elegant World"10:28
9."Clouds Across the Moon"5:15
10."Overtime Work"7:10
Total length:63:37
gollark: ... as if.
gollark: Skynet's `send` and `receive` functions handle the connection and listening stuff automatically, yes.
gollark: <@94122472290394112> EXT vs Skynet:Skynet:* wildcard channel - allows listening to all system messages* API may be nicer to use, as you don't *need* to call skynet.listen anywhere - you do need to call EXT.run somewhere, in parallel or something* Skynet's backend (not the CC side) assigns each connected socket an ID, and tells you which IDs recevied messages. This is not much use.EXT:* messages only readable by people on same channel or server operator* somewhat more complete API - allows closing channels - Skynet can do this but the CC side doesn't handle it
gollark: Yeeep.
gollark: No, because the storage system just lets you pull out items by their name.

References

  1. "CROSSOVER". Sony Music Entertainment Japan (in Japanese). Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  2. "CROSSOVER | 砂原良徳". Oricon (in Japanese). Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  3. "砂原良徳 (page 2 of 3)". CD Journal (in Japanese). April 14, 2011. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
  4. Porter, Charlie (January 24, 1998). "New album releases". The Times. p. 11. What's best is the first known cover of that Eighties space-age weepy, Clouds Across the Moon by the Rah Band, which sounds as if it were performed by an Oriental Bucks Fizz.
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