Makes Revolution

Makes Revolution was the first album released by Takanori Nishikawa and Daisuke Asakura. The release date of this album was August 12, 1996.

Makes Revolution
Studio album by
T.M. Revolution
ReleasedAugust 12, 1996 (1996-08-12)
Recorded1996
GenreJ-pop
Length3:48
LabelAntinos Records
ProducerDaisuke Asakura
T.M. Revolution chronology
Makes Revolution restoration LEVEL -> 3

Track listing

# Title Length Lyrics/Music
1 "We Make Revolution" 01:25 Daisuke Asakura
2 "dokusai -monopolize-(dokusai -monopolize- (独裁 -monopolize-) ESPECIAL D-Mix" 5:09 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
3 "BLACK OR WHITE? ESPECIAL D-Mix" 4:39 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
4 "PIN-UP LADY" 5:11 Daisuke Asakura/Makoto Asakura
5 yume no shizuku(yume no shizuku (夢の雫)" 5:21 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
6 "URBAN BEASTS" 5:38 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
7 "hesojokujo -venus- (Hesoshukujo -Venus- (臍淑女 -ヴィーナス-) " 04:41 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
8 "LIAR'S SMILE" 4:26 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
9 "HEALING MY SOUL" 3:29 Daisuke Asakura/Akio Inoue
gollark: But that is... absolutely not the case.
gollark: I mean, yes, if you already trust everyone to act sensibly and without doing bad stuff, then privacy doesn't matter for those reasons.
gollark: Oh, and as an extension to the third thing, if you already have some sort of vast surveillance apparatus, even if you trust the government of *now*, a worse government could come along and use it later for... totalitarian things.
gollark: For example:- the average person probably does *some* sort of illegal/shameful/bad/whatever stuff, and if some organization has information on that it can use it against people it wants to discredit (basically, information leads to power, so information asymmetry leads to power asymmetry). This can happen if you decide to be an activist or something much later, even- having lots of data on you means you can be manipulated more easily (see, partly, targeted advertising, except that actually seems to mostly be poorly targeted)- having a government be more effective at detecting minor crimes (which reduced privacy could allow for) might *not* actually be a good thing, as some crimes (drug use, I guess?) are kind of stupid and at least somewhat tolerable because they *can't* be entirely enforced practically
gollark: No, it probably isn't your fault, it must have been dropped from my brain stack while I was writing the rest.
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