

It’s tempting to excuse the relatively lukewarm “Mirai No Museum” because of its commercial obligations. This, maximalist-pop-trio Perfume’s newest single, serves as the theme song for the upcoming Doraemon film which seems to involve some sort of “future museum” (which is what you get when you translate the title). After a string of songs in 2012 that saw the group and producer Yasutaka Nakata continuing to flex their J-Pop brilliance (“Point” and “Hurly Burly” are about as strong a one-two punch I’ve heard in a while), “Mirai No Museum” sounds like a lazy stroll through a museum, bouncy but never really taking any risks save for an occasional Nakata touch lurking in the back. The chorus is something you’d expect from an idol-pop group, not a trio behind killer hooks. It SOUNDS like something made to play harmlessly behind the opening-credit sequence for a movie focused on a robot-cat. I guess we should forgive this single, just because it has commercial interests at heart.
Nope, that’s a cop out, because plenty of other J-Pop artists have taken commercial obligations and created great music out of it. It’s one of the unavoidable aspects of Japan’s pop scene, that many singles are commissioned with commercial use in mind…but that doesn’t mean the music has to be middling. Kaela Kimura’s “Wonder Volt” serves as the theme song for the Japanese version of Frankenweenie, but she used the prompt to create a song that manages to fit the Tim-Burton-made vibe of the film while still sounding daring. Yasutaka Nakata, especially, is good at working within limitations – Kyary Pamyu Pamyu’s “Fashion Monster” was greenlit for a clothing store, but that song stands as one of her best singles yet and her strongest lyrical display. Heck, Perfume have been the masters of delivering great music born out of marketing requests since they got big in 2007. So let’s not excuse “Mirai No Museum” – it’s just sorta lackluster.
Originally from the blog
The song is more like 古臭い邦楽のミュージアム a.k.a “Furukusai Hougaku no Museum” (Museum of Outdated J-pop).
And just in case, can anyone give me a better title than this?

Breaking news: Perfume reacting to US President Obama’s victory!
spits
OH YEH! OBAMA-SAMA!!!
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(Source: lovetheperfume)
makin my way down rural japan
walkin fast
shiba inus pass
and im home bound
geez i want to have this daikon kid preserved in vinegar and displayed in my guest room
I HATE how certain people want to be from another ethnicity than their own. KOREABOOS.
There is one at my school who would rather be Korean than Vietnamese, which is her race. She is influenced by Kpop and all the “cute” stuff that goes along with Kpop. She thinks she can sing and dance, so she…
haha moar power to you! I’m Vietnamese and I love my culture and my people. And I love foreign cultures too - but never to the point of becoming a kimchi/sushi/friedchicken wannabe.
I do wish that both words “Koreanophile” and “Koreaboo” get widespread in a short span of time, because it’s unfair to solely judge overly obsessive fanboys/fangirls by simply pointing at the Japanophiles and weeaboos.
And FYI, I love Korean music, Japanese music and Western music, but put your so-called K-pop, J-pop or American Top 40 outside my door or you’ll taste my bitter suicidal bashing. You have been warned.
A message from the real Yarky

kanchiwa JAP no parfum des

This is how you should do the proper SPRING UP SPEED UP.
Damn this is too precious to hate. Mah friends call it the shopping strut.そう! SPRING OF LIFE