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Sexual XXXXX!
View on Wikipedia| Sexual XXXXX! | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | November 21, 1987 September 19, 2002 (digital remaster) September 5, 2007 (remaster) | |||
| Recorded | June–October 1987 at Avaco Creative Studio in Tokyo; Star Ship Studio in Osaka; Victor Aoyama Studio in Tokyo | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 42:56 | |||
| Language | Japanese, English | |||
| Label | Victor | |||
| Producer | Buck-Tick | |||
| Buck-Tick chronology | ||||
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Sexual XXXXX! is the second studio album by the Japanese rock band Buck-Tick. It was the group's major label debut and was released on vinyl, cassette and CD on November 21, 1987[1][2] through on Victor Entertainment.[3] The album was digitally remastered and re-released on September 19, 2002, with a different cover.[4] Sexual XXXXX! was remastered and re-released again on September 5, 2007. The songs "Do the I Love You" and "Hyper Love" were later re-recorded for the band's compilation album Koroshi no Shirabe: This Is Not Greatest Hits (1992). "My Eyes & Your Eyes" was also re-recorded for the b-side to their "Rendezvous" single in 2007. At the time of its release, the album peaked at number 33 on the Oricon charts[5] and as of 2011, has sold 40,000 copies.[6]
Track listing
[edit]All tracks are written by Hisashi Imai, except where noted.
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Empty Girl" | 3:36 |
| 2. | "Future for Future" | 3:52 |
| 3. | "Dream or Truth" | 4:23 |
| 4. | "Do the I Love You" | 2:56 |
| 5. | "Illusion" (lyrics written by Atsushi Sakurai) | 6:19 |
| 6. | "Sexual XXXXX!" (lyrics written by Sakurai) | 3:33 |
| 7. | "Sissy Boy" | 4:26 |
| 8. | "Mis-Cast" | 3:35 |
| 9. | "Hyper Love" | 5:03 |
| 10. | "My Eyes & Your Eyes" | 4:54 |
| Total length: | 42:56 | |
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 11. | "Romanesque[a]" (Demo version) | 4:04 |
| 12. | "Sexual XXXXX!" (live from Climax Together on September 11, 1992; lyrics written by Sakurai) | 3:49 |
Personnel
[edit]- Atsushi Sakurai - lead vocals
- Hisashi Imai - lead guitar, backing vocals
- Hidehiko Hoshino - rhythm guitar, acoustic guitar, backing vocals
- Yutaka Higuchi - bass
- Toll Yagami - drums
Additional performers
- Tsutomu Nakayama - keyboards, backing vocals
- Jun-ichi Tanaka - backing vocals
Production
- Buck-Tick - producers
- Kazumitsu Higuchi; Kazuo Sawaki - executive producers
- Shuuji Yamaguchi - engineer, mixing
- Hideaki Ikeda; Kouki Fukui - assistant engineers
- Katsunori Miyake - graphic design, cover art
- Masanori Kato - photography
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Sexual XXXXX! by BUCK-TICK MTV". MTV. 2012-09-05. Archived from the original on 2012-09-05. Retrieved 2022-05-09.
- ^ "Discography at JaME". jame-world.com. Retrieved 2011-04-12.
- ^ "Buck-Tick – Sexual XXXXX! (1987, CD)". Discogs.
- ^ "SEXUAL xxxxx ! (digital remaster)". jame-world.com. Retrieved 2011-04-12.
- ^ "BUCK-TICKのアルバム売上ランキング ORICON STYLE". 2014-11-15. Archived from the original on 2014-11-15. Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ "Sexual XXXXX! review". Buck-Tick Zone.com. Archived from the original on 2007-07-17. Retrieved 2012-01-29.[unreliable source?]
Sexual XXXXX!
View on GrokipediaBackground and recording
Buck-Tick's early career
Buck-Tick was formed in 1983 in Fujioka, Gunma, Japan, by guitarist Hisashi Imai and bassist Yutaka Higuchi, initially under the name Hinan Go-Go, with Hidehiko Hoshino on guitar, Atsushi Sakurai starting on drums, and Hironobu Araki as vocalist. The band practiced with second-hand instruments and performed their first shows covering punk and rock songs at local amateur festivals. By 1985, after Araki's departure, Sakurai switched to lead vocals and Toll Yagami (older brother of bassist Yutaka Higuchi) joined on drums, solidifying the classic lineup of Sakurai (vocals), Imai (lead guitar), Hoshino (rhythm guitar), Higuchi (bass), and Yagami (drums), which has remained unchanged since.[4][5][6] In 1984, the group renamed themselves Buck-Tick—inspired by the Japanese word for firecracker, bakuchiku—and began playing original material alongside covers at events like the Takasaki Rock Festival and Yamaha Popcon, honing a raw, energetic style influenced by punk acts. Their early career focused on building skills through frequent local gigs in Gunma before expanding to Tokyo.[7][8][6] By the mid-1980s, Buck-Tick had relocated their activities to Tokyo's underground scene, performing regularly at venues such as Shinjuku Jam and Shibuya La Mama, and participating in influential indie events like the Beat For Beat For Beat concert series starting in November 1985. These shows, including their full-band debut with the completed lineup on December 4, 1985, at Shinjuku Jam, helped cultivate a dedicated fanbase amid Japan's burgeoning post-punk and visual kei movements. In 1986, they continued monthly performances across Tokyo, Gunma, and university festivals, solidifying their presence in the indie circuit.[5][9][10] The band's indie breakthrough came with their debut single "To-Search" in 1986 via the independent label Taiyo Records, followed by their first studio album, Hurry Up Mode, released on April 1, 1987. This album established their post-punk and new wave influences through fast-paced tracks blending aggressive guitars, synth elements, and rhythmic urgency, drawing from bands like The Clash and UK new wave acts. It topped Japan's indie album charts and marked their shift toward a more polished yet rebellious sound.[9][11][12][13] Amid rising popularity, Buck-Tick released their first live video, Buck-Tick Live at the Live Inn, on September 21, 1987, documenting a high-energy performance from earlier that year at Shibuya Live Inn, capturing their onstage charisma and growing appeal in the underground.[14][11] In June 1987, following the success of Hurry Up Mode, the band signed with Victor Entertainment's Invitation sublabel, securing a major label deal that preserved their creative autonomy—no forced image changes or session players—while enabling wider distribution. This transition paved the way for professional recording resources in their major debut album.[11][8]Recording sessions
The recording sessions for Buck-Tick's major label debut album Sexual XXXXX! took place from July 26 to August 18, 1987, across three studios in Japan: Avaco Creative Studio in Tokyo, Star Ship Studio in Osaka, and Victor Aoyama Studio in Tokyo.[15][11] This marked the band's first use of Victor Aoyama Studio.[2] The album was self-produced by Buck-Tick, with arrangements credited to the band alongside Tsutomu Nakayama.[16] Nakayama also provided keyboards and backing vocals throughout the record, incorporating additional sonic textures to support the band's emerging new wave influences.[16]Composition
Musical style
Sexual XXXXX! is primarily classified as Japanese rock infused with new wave and post-punk elements, characteristic of the band's early visual kei leanings.[1][17] The album's sound features dreamy, reverb-heavy guitars that create an ethereal texture, complemented by spacious drum patterns and prominent, driving bass lines that anchor the rhythmic foundation.[3] Keyboards and synthesizers, played by session musician Tsutomu Nakayama, add layers of atmospheric depth, enhancing the album's immersive quality and evoking a sense of otherworldly escapism.[2] Retrospective analyses have described this blend as having aged like fine wine, with the production's polish contributing to a timeless, hazy allure despite its 1980s origins.[3] Spanning 42:56 across 10 tracks, the album balances energetic, upbeat numbers such as "Do the 'I Love You'"—with its infectious hooks and catchy guitar riffs—with moodier, illusionary compositions like "Illusion," which lean into darker post-punk introspection through subtle builds and echoing instrumentation.[18][19] As Buck-Tick's major-label debut, Sexual XXXXX! marks an evolution from the rawer, indie-edged punk of their previous album Hurry Up Mode, achieving a more experimental yet accessible refinement through improved production and fuller arrangements that highlight the band's growing sonic sophistication.[19][17]Lyrical themes
The lyrics of Sexual XXXXX! center on themes of sexuality, desire, illusion, and existential emptiness, often presented through provocative and introspective narratives. The title track, "Sexual XXXXX!," exemplifies explicit explorations of physical intimacy and seduction, with bilingual lyrics blending Japanese verses about fleeting eyes and burning bodies with direct English commands like "Please me, aha, sexual intercourse!" and "Oh yes, sexual intercourse!" to heighten the sense of urgent desire and illusory passion.[20][21] Other songs delve into emotional desolation and the blurring of reality. In "Empty Girl," the narrative portrays a superficial, gossip-driven female figure trapped in emotional void, as seen in repeated refrains of "Empty Girl!!" and imagery of a "wet head with nothing but / A princess begging for what's not there," underscoring themes of relational emptiness and self-alienation.[22] Similarly, "Dream or Truth" intertwines longing with ambiguity between fantasy and reality, featuring lines such as "A trembling voice to Your Heart / An unreachable Dream or Truth" and pleas like "Touch Me Please," evoking an existential haze where destiny and embrace dissolve into sweet, elusive sensations.[23] The album's predominant use of bilingual elements—Japanese as the primary language interspersed with English phrases—amplifies sensuality while conveying a detached, alienating tone, mirroring the cultural tensions of 1980s Japanese youth amid rapid modernization and identity shifts.[24] This stylistic choice lays early groundwork for Buck-Tick's role as precursors to the visual kei movement's emphasis on theatrical, boundary-pushing expression.[25]Release and promotion
Release formats
The album Sexual XXXXX! was initially released on November 21, 1987, by Victor Entertainment's Invitation label in multiple physical formats, including vinyl LP (catalog number VIH-28307), cassette (VCF-10336), and CD (VDR-1435), marking Buck-Tick's major label debut.[1] A digitally remastered edition followed on September 19, 2002, issued exclusively as a CD (VICL-60961) to enhance audio fidelity while preserving the original tracklist and artwork.[26] Further remastering occurred on September 5, 2007, with a limited-edition CD release (VICL-62541) featuring improved sound quality and a paper sleeve replica of the original packaging, available only in Japan.[27] In the digital era, the album remains accessible on streaming platforms like Apple Music and Spotify, retaining its core 10-track structure from the 1987 original without alterations to the sequencing or content.[28]Marketing efforts
The release of Sexual XXXXX! aligned closely with Buck-Tick's expanding live performances, building on the momentum from their earlier 1987 video release Buck-Tick Live at the Live Inn, recorded on June 16 at Shibuya's Live Inn venue during a celebratory show marking their major label signing.[29][14] This live footage, distributed as a VHS on September 21, captured the band's raw energy and helped cultivate anticipation among Japan's underground rock audiences ahead of the album's November launch.[29] The title track "Sexual XXXXX!" received prominent promotional treatment through a music video directed by Yasumune Muramatsu and shot in September 1987 at Star Ship Studio in Osaka.[30][31] The video showcased the band's emerging visual kei style, featuring dramatic makeup, androgynous attire, and atmospheric visuals that blended sensuality with gothic undertones, setting a template for their future aesthetic identity.[30] Victor Entertainment, Buck-Tick's new major label, mounted a targeted domestic campaign to penetrate Japan's rock and underground scenes, including radio appearances on programs such as NHK's Audition (November 18) and Hitachi Fan! Fun! Today (November 17), alongside promotional materials like cartoon-strip postcards distributed in six episodes to engage fans.[11][28] The push emphasized in-person events, with meet-and-greet sessions and signings held in cities including Takasaki, Nagoya, Sapporo, Fukuoka, and Kawasaki from September through December, fostering grassroots buzz without any significant international outreach at the time.[11]Reception and legacy
Critical reception
Upon its 1987 release, Sexual XXXXX! garnered limited contemporary critical attention outside Japan's niche rock and emerging visual kei scenes, where it was praised for its atmospheric production blending new wave and post-punk elements. Most discourse at the time appeared in Japanese fanzines and local music publications, reflecting the band's underground status prior to broader fame.[1] Retrospective reviews have been more favorable, highlighting the album's role in Buck-Tick's evolution. A 2018 Sputnikmusic review described it as a "fine collection of songs" that prefigures the band's later experimental directions, despite noting awkward early vocal takes and production issues. On Album of the Year, it holds a user score of 76 out of 100 based on 27 ratings, with reviewers commending its "strong atmosphere" featuring dreamy guitars and synths that contribute to a timeless new wave vibe.[32] Rate Your Music users rate it 3.5 out of 5 from 379 votes, often pointing to its jollier, catchier tones compared to the band's raw debut album. English-language criticism remains sparse, with much of the ongoing discussion confined to visual kei enthusiast communities and online forums rather than mainstream outlets.[33] Critics generally agree the album has aged well, its synth-guitar interplay evoking a sensual, rhythmic energy that endures in the band's legacy.[3]Commercial performance and impact
Sexual XXXXX! achieved moderate commercial success upon its release, peaking at number 33 on Japan's Oricon Albums Chart and ultimately selling approximately 40,000 copies.[2] This performance represented a solid debut for Buck-Tick on a major label, transitioning the band from their independent roots to broader visibility within the Japanese rock scene. The album's sales figures underscored its appeal to an underground audience eager for innovative sounds amid the late 1980s music landscape. The release marked Buck-Tick's breakthrough as a major-label act, solidifying their pivotal role in the emerging visual kei movement. Buck-Tick's early work contributed to visual kei as a distinct subgenre, influencing the movement's emphasis on theatrical visuals and androgynous imagery.[34] In terms of legacy, tracks like "Do the 'I Love You'" and "Hyper Love" were re-recorded for the 1992 compilation Koroshi no Shirabe: This Is Not Greatest Hits, highlighting the enduring value of the original material and extending its reach to new generations.[35] This reworking contributed to Buck-Tick's influence on later Japanese rock acts, who drew from the album's experimental edge. Furthermore, Sexual XXXXX! exerted a cultural impact on the 1980s underground scene, bridging post-punk influences with gothic and erotic themes that became hallmarks of visual kei. The album was remastered in 2002 and 2007, preserving its sound for contemporary audiences.[1]Track listing and credits
Track listing
All tracks on Sexual XXXXX! were written by members of Buck-Tick, with music composed primarily by guitarist Hisashi Imai and lyrics by Imai (except where noted by vocalist Atsushi Sakurai); the album contains no bonus tracks in its original edition.[16][36] The tracks are primarily in Japanese, incorporating occasional English phrases.[2] The title track, "Sexual XXXXX!", serves as the album's namesake and received a promotional music video.[2]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Empty Girl" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 3:35 |
| 2 | "Future for Future" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 3:51 |
| 3 | "Dream or Truth" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 4:19 |
| 4 | "Do the 'I Love You'" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 2:55 |
| 5 | "Illusion" | Lyrics: Sakurai; music: Imai | 6:18 |
| 6 | "Sexual XXXXX!" | Lyrics: Sakurai; music: Imai | 3:32 |
| 7 | "Sissy Boy" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 4:25 |
| 8 | "Mis-Cast" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 3:32 |
| 9 | "Hyper Love" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 5:02 |
| 10 | "My Eyes & Your Eyes" | Lyrics and music: Imai | 4:56 |
