Tilt (Kahimi Karie album)

Tilt is the third proper full-length by Shibuya-kei artist Kahimi Karie. It features songs by Momus, Arto Lindsay, Julien Ribot and The Olivia Tremor Control, among others. The track "Pygmalism" was taken from the Momus-penned EP Journey To The Centre Of Me; "Do You Know The Time?" and "Metaphors" were reprised from Karie's Olivia Tremor Control collaboration EP Once Upon A Time of the same year.

Tilt
Studio album by
Released2000
GenreShibuya-kei, experimental, electronica
Length56:11
LabelPolydor (Japan)
ProducerKahimi Karie
Kahimi Karie chronology
K.K.K.K.K.
(1998)
''Tilt''
(2000)
K.K. Works 1998-2000
(2001)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

The album was released in 2000 by the Japanese branch of the Polydor major label; it was available in the rest of the world as an import. Tilt can be seen as bridging the stylistic gap between Karie's bubbly early work and later, more demanding releases.

Track listing

  1. "I Can't Wait For Summer" (Karie/Kanda) – 4:16
  2. "Je dormais sous la niege" (Julien Ribot) – 5:06
  3. "Sleepwalking" (Lindsay/Gibbs) – 3:10
  4. "Pygmalism" (Momus) – 6:00
  5. "Ice Age Train" (Claydon) – 4:39
  6. "Dear Boy" (Cantuaria/Lindsay) – 3:32
  7. "Do You Know The Time?" (Olivia Tremor Control) – 3:12
  8. "Metaphors" (Olivia Tremor Control) – 2:42
  9. "?" (Julien Ribot) – 3:40
  10. "(We'll Go) Separate Ways" (Tahiti 80) – 3:34
  11. "Kemuri" (Karie/Kanda) – 5:02
  12. "Happy Birthday What Am I For?" (Karie/Barry 7) – 9:15
  13. "Lila's Theme" (Richard M/Robert M) – 2:01
gollark: That sounds like it might be excessively expensive for stuff which doesn't actually happen all that often.
gollark: The transit files are a serialized datascript database or something and may be hard for other programs to read. Also, I think it mostly stores data in memory, so you wouldn't see your changes instantly.
gollark: If the probability of false positives is low relative to the number of possible keys, it's probably fine™.
gollark: I don't think you can *in general*, but you'll probably know in some cases what the content might be. Lots of network protocols and such include checksums and headers and defined formats, which can be validated, and English text could be detected.
gollark: But having access to several orders of magnitude of computing power than exists on Earth, and quantum computers (which can break the hard problems involved in all widely used asymmetric stuff) would.

References

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