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"Silent Jealousy" is a single released by X Japan (then named X) on September 11, 1991.

"Silent Jealousy"
Single by X
from the album Jealousy
ReleasedSeptember 11, 1991
Genre
  • Symphonic metal
  • power metal
  • speed metal
Length13:24
LabelSony
Songwriter(s)Yoshiki
Producer(s)X
X singles chronology
"Week End"
(1990)
"Silent Jealousy"
(1991)
"Standing Sex"
(1991)
Music video
"Silent Jealousy" on YouTube

Summary


The song's structure is comparable to "Kurenai", opening with a calm intro, performed on a single instrument, followed by a speed metal composition with symphonic elements. It also includes a short excerpt of Tchaikovsky's "Swan Lake" during the piano-driven bridge. Yoshiki described the song as very fast and very hard to play, and said that while people may call the guitar riff heavy metal, he thinks of it as punk. On its composition he explained, "I really love punk rock, and I wanted to have it as punk as possible, but as melodious as possible. Which is very contradictory. Punk rock never really sees the orchestra, but I tried to combine those two aims."[1]

The single's B-side is an alternate version of "Sadistic Desire", originally featured on the band's debut album Vanishing Vision.

Live recordings of "Silent Jealousy" can be found on the "Say Anything" single and various releases featuring the band's Tokyo Dome performance on January 7, 1992, as part of the three-day concert series On the Verge of Destruction.

On November 21, 1993, SME Records released (ダブルエックス, Daburu Ekkusu, lit. "Double-X"), a short film based on the manga series X by Clamp and set to X Japan's music. It features a slideshow of the manga's artwork set to a medley of X Japan's "Silent Jealousy", "Kurenai" and "Endless Rain" and a music video for the song "X" directed by Shigeyuki Hayashi.[2]

Australian metal band Lord covered the title song as a bonus track on the Japanese version of their 2007 album Ascendence, with vocals performed by Hideaki Niwa.[3] Finnish power metal band Sonata Arctica also covered part of the song during one of the concerts on their Japanese tour and according to Tony Kakko, the song is "absolutely splendid" but some parts are "hyperfast" that it does not suit Sonata Arctica's style well.[4] It also served as wrestler Chris Jericho's one night entrance song for his return to Japan.[5]


Commercial performance


The song reached number 3 on the Oricon charts, and charted for 18 weeks.[6] In 1991, with 234,950 copies sold was the 58th best-selling single of the year, being certified Gold by RIAJ.[7]


Track listing


All lyrics are written by Yoshiki.

No.TitleMusicLength
1."Silent Jealousy"Yoshiki7:19
2."Sadistic Desire"hide6:05

Personnel


X
Other

References


  1. "The 10 best X Japan songs, as chosen by Yoshiki". Metal Hammer. 2017-11-08. Retrieved 2021-02-24.
  2. Clamp. Clamp no Kiseki, Vol. 11. Tokyopop. p. 31.
  3. "アセンデンス". amazon.co.jp. Retrieved 2011-11-13.
  4. "Interview / Tony Kakko, chanteur de Sonata Arctica" (in French). La Grosse Radio. 2009-08-15. Retrieved 2017-05-12.
  5. Chris Jericho (2014). The Best in the World: At What I Have No Idea. Hachette UK. ISBN 9781409142300.
  6. X JAPANのシングル売り上げランキング. oricon.co.jp (in Japanese). Oricon. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
  7. "月次認定作品 認定年月:1991年 11月" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 2017-05-11.

На других языках


- [en] Silent Jealousy

[es] Silent Jealousy

«Silent Jealousy» es una de las canciones más conocidas del grupo de rock japonés X Japan. Fue lanzada en el álbum Jealousy, el 1 de julio de 1991, y posteriormente lanzada también en el sencillo Silent Jealousy. La canción está compuesta íntegramente por Yoshiki, autor de la mayoría de las canciones del grupo. Como curiosidad, destacar que, aunque fuera muy famosa y le gustase mucho a los fanes, la canción solo fue interpretada unas pocas veces, en conciertos mayores; eso sí: hay diversas versiones tocadas en programas musicales.

[ru] Silent Jealousy

«Silent Jealousy» — песня японской метал-группы X Japan (на тот момент — X), выпущенная в качестве сингла 11 сентября 1991 года.



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