Sithu Aye - Senpai III review
Band: | Sithu Aye |
Album: | Senpai III |
Style: | Instrumental, Progressive metal |
Release date: | January 08, 2021 |
A review by: | RaduP |
01. Choices On A Piece Of Paper
02. Differing Paths
03. A Future With No Colour
04. Hanako's Shoujo Manga Spinoff!
05. Mari's New Day
06. Reina: A Rival's Reprise
07. Time To Decide!
08. Winter And Entrance Exams
09. Graduation
10. Anime As Leaders II: The Joy Of Moe
I... I'm out of my element here... Uhh... "Sithu Ayy Lmao" I guess...
I don't watch a lot of anime, partly because a large deal of it doesn't interest me, as I don't really feel as inclined to check out cartoons from this one specific country, and also because I'll go mad if one more person insists I watch Jojo's Bizarre Adventure. Just because I watched a bunch of Miyazaki, Takahata, Otomo* or Oshii films, and I constantly ask my weeb friends who they think would win if Orochimaru fought Kisame, and I am promise I'll start either Berserk or Serial Experiments: Lain this year, I still don't feel as big of a kinship to the anime culture. I have vague impressions of what terms like "baka", "senpai", "yandere", "tsundere" or "shonen" mean. I still misspelled this album's name as "Sempai III" way too many times.
Now that I got it out there that I definitely absolutely in no way shape or form am I an anime fan, I also haven't paid much attention to this scene of guitarists that Sithu Aye is part of, but I did try to make some amends to it last year when I reviewed Plini's album. I'm not gonna get in the same "what genre is this really" discussions that I got in those, because I assume you already read all my reviews, including the ones I deleted and the ones that are behind a paywall. But both Plini and Sithu Aye are in the same box of instrumental guitar driven music that etches on the borders on metal just hard enough to give us a reason to feature them on a metal website.
I think Senpai III is even less metal than Impulse Voices. But I guess that makes a lot of sense for an album inspired by this "high school" brand of anime. But it's a lot more fleshed out than the previous two Senpai EPs, and it doesn't just have to do with this being expanded to full length runtimes, but the production is a lot more expansive, with all of its aspects and the performances all credited to Sithu, and a flow that actually seems to create and sustain a certain dramatic momentum. It all makes more sense when you know that Sithu also released a novella along with this album. I'm not gonna read it. But you can kinda tell that these two probably work pretty well together, even if reading the novella probably takes a longer time than this album's runtime.
As a whole, it sounds pretty good, with a mood that doesn't take itself too seriously even if the means of achieving that mood are darn serious. The production and performances are fantastic, and those are pretty impossible not to be appreciated even if one finds the jovial nature of the album unappealing. I'm a bit split on this, since it reminds me of having to disconsider the opinions of people with anime profile pics, but you take it away from this album, and it's still such a fun and emotional listen.
*When I saw that I watched a bunch of Otomo films I mean just Akira.
| Written on 17.01.2021 by Doesn't matter that much to me if you agree with me, as long as you checked the album out. |
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