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Rock/Pop
LPレコード

The Black Parade<Colored Vinyl>

4.9

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フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2025年10月10日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルReprise
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 0093624829928
SKU 093624829928

構成数 : 2枚

1.The End
2.Dead!
3.This Is How I Disappear
4.The Sharpest Lives
5.Welcome to the Black Parade
6.I Don't Love You
7.House of Wolves
8.Cancer
9.Mama
10.Sleep
11.Teenagers
12.Disenchanted
13.Famous Last Words

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
  2. 2.[LPレコード]

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: My Chemical Romance

商品の紹介

At the heart of My Chemical Romance lore is the story of lead singer/songwriter/mouthpiece Gerard Way, an animator who decided to abandon illustrations and do "something with his life" in the wake of 9/11. Needless to say, that "important" thing was My Chemical Romance, which quickly rose to prominence among the emo and neo-punk bands that cluttered the rock landscape of the 2000s thanks in large part to "I'm Not OK (I Promise)," a surging piece of emo pop with a hook as ridiculously catchy as its title was ridiculous. It deservedly became a hit on both sides of the Atlantic in 2005, dragging its accompanying album -- 2004's Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, the group's second -- along for the ride, turning MCR into stars, at least in modern rock circles. But, anybody who didn't follow the fashions of emo and punk closely might have ignored the group's tragic, romantic neo-goth image and merely assumed that MCR was another good poppy punk one-hit wonder, not far removed from, say, Fall Out Boy. My Chemical Romance intended to dispel all such misconceptions with their third album, The Black Parade, an unabashed, old-fashioned concept album, complete with characters wandering through a vague narrative that concerns very big themes like death. Actually, death is the only big theme on The Black Parade, which shouldn't come as a big surprise for a band that named their stopgap live album Life on the Murder Scene, nor should the record's theatricality come as much as a shock, either -- tragedy and melodrama are hardwired in the group's DNA, as illustrated by the often-told tale of Way's inspiration to form the band. Also, it's not as if The Black Parade is MCR's first concept album, either. Their 2002 debut, I Brought You My Bullets, and its follow-up, Three Cheers, told the interlocking story of doomed lovers on the run from vengeful vampires or some such nonsense, but only the hardcore who were willing to analyze endlessly on the Internet were aware of this; based on pure sound, MCR was an emo-punk band through and through, screaming out their feelings as if they were revelations, so it was easy to assume that their music was merely autobiographical. My Chemical Romance took great pains to have The Black Parade seem like its own theatrical work, launching a whole Web-based campaign, filled with videos and interviews explaining how the album tells the tale of "the Patient," a young man dying of cancer in a hospital bed who flashes back on his undistinguished life upon the moment of his death, and how the band got so into this project they considered themselves not My Chemical Romance, but a band called the Black Parade -- shades of the Beatles and Sgt. Pepper! Naturally, those allusions are quite deliberate, and one that MCR played up in that pre-release campaign, dropping liberal reference to Queen (particularly A Night at the Opera) and Pink Floyd's The Wall as well. It was all quite reminiscent of how the Killers set up Sam's Town with endless name-dropping of Bruce Springsteen and U2, but where the Las Vegas quartet wound up with an unholy fusion of these two extremes, MCR never synthesizes; they openly steal from their holy trinity, then graft it upon the sound they've patented. Often, it seems as if they copied The Wall onto tracing paper and placed it upon Three Cheers. The story of The Black Parade is nearly identical to The Wall -- Pink and the Patient run through a litany of childhood and adulthood traumas; absent fathers loom large; many of the main character's flaws are cruelly deemed the fault of the mother -- and there are plenty of flourishes lifted from Roger Waters' magnum opus: the opening fanfare "The End" is a re-creation of "In the Flesh," right down to the churning heavy guitars that come crashing in halfway through, while "Mama" -- shades of "Mother"! -- sounds like Green Day performing "The Trial," as Way affects Billie Joe's affected mock-English accent as he comes tantalizingly close to to be continued...
Rovi

グリーン・デイ仕事でお馴染みのロブ・カヴァロをプロデューサーに迎えたニュー・アルバムは、〈死〉をテーマにしたロック・オペラ。エモでパンクでメタルな、底無しの熱量を内包した〈マイケミ節〉は止まることを知らないし、加えてメンバーもその影響を公言するクイーンやピンク・フロイドを思わせる劇的で感動的な楽曲が目白押しだ。このアルバムを引っ提げて、彼らはふたたび新たなるロックの扉を開いた!
bounce (C)渡辺 貴仁
タワーレコード(2006年12月号掲載 (P105))

メンバーズレビュー

7件のレビューがあります
4.9
86%
14%
0%
0%
0%
イントロがとても印象的な曲。
今聴いてもカッコいいです!
2025/05/01 ぐれさん
0
10年以上も前の楽曲ですが今の人が聴いても心に刺さる名曲だと思います!最初に聴いた時からずっと心に残っている作品です。
2021/03/05 htさん
0

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