Splash Gold (Natsu no Kiseki)/Prism of Eyes
"Splash Gold —Natsu no Kiseki— / Prism of Eyes" is MAX's 30th single under the Sonic Groove label. It was released on August 2, 2006, and was their first single to be released as a CD single and CD+DVD single. "Splash Gold -Natsu no Kiseki-" is a mid-tempo pop song with Okinawan folk influences. "Prism of Eyes" was used as the ending theme to Tokusatsu series Madan Senki Ryukendo for episodes 30–39 and is in the style of music used regularly in such programming. It is the last single to feature vocals from former member Aki, before she left the group on August 31, 2008.
"Splash Gold -夏の奇跡-" "Prism of Eyes" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ||||
Single by MAX | ||||
Released | August 2, 2006 | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Length | 16:50 | |||
Label | Sonic Groove | |||
Songwriter(s) | Splash Gold - Natsu no Kiseki, Natsumi Watanabe, K-Muto, Zooco Prism of Eyes - Tatsuji Ueda, Takamitsu Shimazaki | |||
MAX singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Alternative cover | ||||
![]() The cover for the CD edition |
Tentative track listing
CD
# | Title | Songwriters | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Splash Gold -Natsu no Kiseki-" | Natsumi Watanabe, K-Muto, Zooco | 4:11 |
2. | "Prism of Eyes" | Tatsuji Ueda, Takamitsu Shimazaki | 4:17 |
3. | "Splash Gold -Natsu no Kiseki- (Instrumental)" | K-Muto, Zooco | 4:11 |
4. | "Prism of Eyes (Instrumental)" | Takamitsu Shimazaki | 4:13 |
DVD
# | Title |
---|---|
1. | "Splash Gold -Natsu no Kiseki-" (Music Clip) |
2. | "Splash Gold -Natsu no Kiseki-" (Making) |
Charts
Oricon Sales Chart (Japan)
Release | Chart | Peak Position | Sales Total | Chart Run |
---|---|---|---|---|
30 November 2005 | Oricon Weekly Singles Chart | 60 | 2,760 | 2 weeks |
gollark: You should, if you care, probably at least run it through an obufscator for .NET.
gollark: > 5. .net platform is cracker / hacker friendly Any program running on the client can INEVITABLY be reverse-engineered. Do not rely on it not experiencing that, because you will fail.
gollark: > 4. XAML - the incredibly messy UI technologyPerhaps, but this is not a *language* thing.
gollark: > 3. Garbage collector and memory leak detection tools?Again, not sure if anyone actually runs into this sort of issue in practice.
gollark: > 1. Performance penalties.> [some rambling about C++].NET is generally pretty much *fast enough*. If your application somehow hits performance bottlenecks, rewrite the slow bits in native code, don't just immediately take a development speed hit.> 2. Need to interoperate with C++ / Native (Windows) API’sI don't know how often you actually need to bind to a native API not wrapped by .NET or a third-party library, but you can do it, it's just annoying - but probably less than using C++ for everything!
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.