Self Portrait | |
Type: | greatest |
Artist: | Hitomi |
Cover: | Self Portrait Hitomi.png |
Alt: | A tightly framed photograph of Hitomi with the title "Self Portrait" superimposed in a white, all caps, sans serif typography style. Against a blue backdrop; her strawberry blonde hair is cut in a choppy, mid-length bob style; her head and gaze are rotated away from the viewer. |
Genre: | J-pop |
Label: | Avex Trax |
Prev Title: | Huma-rhythm |
Prev Year: | 2002 |
Next Title: | HTM: Tiartrop Fles |
Next Year: | 2003 |
Self Portrait (stylized as SELF PORTRAIT) is the second greatest hits album by Japanese singer and songwriter Hitomi. It was released through Avex Trax on September 4, 2002, coinciding with the video album Hitomi Live Tour 2002 Huma-Rhythm. The two-disc compilation spanned Hitomi's eight-year career at that point; viewing it as the beginning of a fresh start, she devised a release "atypical" of the traditional greatest hits format.
The first half of Self Portrait showcases material released after her previous compilation, H (1999), whereas the second half features new renditions of her earlier work, as well as one new song: "Vibes". It includes the single "Understanding", released merely weeks after her last album earlier that year, and a live recording of "Flow".
Self Portrait debuted at number one on the Oricon Weekly Charts. It went on to become Hitomi's longest-charting album at twenty weeks, selling 636,000 copies in total and becoming the twenty-first highest selling album of 2002. Self Portrait received generally positive reviews from music critics, who commented on her artistic growth. At the 17th Japan Gold Disc Awards, the release received an accolade for Rock & Pop Album of the Year.
In February 1999, Avex Trax released Hitomi's first greatest hits album, H. It chronicled her work with music producer Tetsuya Komuro, whose managerial role dissolved the year prior as Hitomi sought greater creative control over her career.[1] Hitomi subsequently began working with Zentaro Watanabe and Dai Nagano; her next album Thermo Plastic (1999), matched the prior success she attained under Komuro, which "[laid] to rest fears that she would struggle without her onetime mentor."[2]
In July 2002, the website Yeah!! J-Pop! reported that Hitomi would be releasing a new best album (ベストアルバム), then-untitled.[3] In an interview with CD Data magazine, Hitomi explained that H (1999) felt like she was "looking back on the past," whereas Self Portrait is deemed as a "halfway stage" towards "an ideal I want to reach," further marking the release as "a declaration that I will continue 'sketching' from this point on, too."[4] She developed the compilation after a period of reflection, stating:
Hitomi had a desire to introduce fans of "Samurai Drive" and "Love 2000" to songs like "There Is..." and "Taion" (体温, "Body Temperature"), which she considered to be "a selection that make up a key point in [my] past". From this, the idea of rearrangements came about, and Hitomi turned her focus towards fashioning a "rebirth" for her Komuro-era songs. In speaking to Beat Freak, during the album's development, it became a topic that she thought it would be "boring to just release an ordinary best album," noting that little time had passed since H three years prior.[5] Hitomi told the magazine that: "I feel that this best album is like a new start for me. [...] I've been wanting to seek someone different from who I am right now."
Self Portrait is presented as a two-disc release, delineating Hitomi's career into two distinct periods. Whereas the second half of Self Portrait is distinguished by Hitomi's early work under music producer Testuya Komuro, the introductory half chronicles her collaboration with Zentaro Watanabe.
The first disc contains nearly every single from Thermo Plastic (1999), Love Life (2000), and Huma-rhythm (2002), bar "Inner Child", "Wish" and "Made to be in Love" from their triple A-side release with "Kimi no Tonari" (君のとなり).[6] [7] The singles "Maria" and "Kimi no Tonari" are rearrangements found on their parent albums, with the latter being a first press bonus track originally. Furthermore, the disc includes the album tracks "Fat Free" and "Why?".
The second disc is a selection of singles from Go to the Top (1995), By Myself (1996) and Déjà-vu (1997), otherwise known as her Komuro era. Each Komuro song was re-recorded, though new arrangements accompany "Candy Girl", "Busy Now" and "In the Future". "Go to the Top" is a "duet" between Hitomi's original and newly-recorded vocals. In addition, the second disc features a live recording of "Flow" performed at the Nippon Budokan, and new song "Vibes".
The album artwork was photographed by longtime collaborator Hidekazu Maiyama in Sicily, Italy; a photo book chronicling the ten-day shoot was published two months later with the same cover. The concert DVD Hitomi Live Tour 2002 Huma-Rhythm, whose release coincided with the Self Portrait compilation, utilizes a similar photograph.
Hitomi made extensive TV promotions throughout August and September 2002, including a performance of "Flow" on the August 26, 2002, broadcast of Hey! Hey Hey! Music Champ,[8] and subsequent appearances on NHK Sokuhō! Uta no Daijiten! (速報! 歌の大辞テン!) on September 11, and NHK BS2 Hits on! Live on September 19, 2002. The compilation was further supported by a two-day concert at the Yoyogi National Stadium; entitled Hitomi Count Down Live 2002 Self Portrait, it was held on December 30 and 31, 2002, in the venue's second gymnasium.[9]
Notes
According to SoundScan Japan, Self Portrait debuted at number one and moved 275,440 copies in its first week.[10] It held steady within the top five in its next two weeks,[11] [12] and marked 541,899 copies in total before it dropped out of the top twenty in its eighth week.[13]
The compilation performed similarly on the Oricon Weekly Album Chart, where it debuted at number one and charted for twenty weeks in total.[14] Self Portrait sold over 636,000 copies in total by the end of 2002.[15] Self Portrait debuted and peaked at number seven on the Japan Top Albums chart according to the October 5, 2002, edition of Billboard magazine.[16]
HTM: Tiartrop Fles | |
Type: | compilation |
Artist: | Hitomi |
Cover: | HTM Tiartrop Fles.png |
Alt: | Drawing of Hitomi done in a sketchy anime-style. The title "HTM Tiartrop Fles" is superimposed in the upper left-hand corner in a green, all caps, heavy bold weight, sans serif typography style. Hitomi figure is laid on her back with legs lifted in air; drawing is sketched from crotch perspective with figure facing viewer. |
Genre: | J-pop |
Label: | Avex Trax |
Prev Title: | Self Portrait |
Prev Year: | 2002 |
Next Title: | Traveler |
Next Year: | 2004 |
HTM: Tiartrop Fles (stylized as HTM〜TIARTROP FLES〜) is a compilation album by Japanese singer and songwriter Hitomi. It was released on October 16, 2003, through Avex Trax. Promoted as a companion to Self Portrait (2002), the album collects B-sides or coupling songs (カップリング曲) that were not previously included on Love Life (2000), Huma-rhythm (2002) or Self Portrait itself.[17]
Its last four tracks make earlier appearances in other forms, with "Plastic Time Machine (8・2・1 Version)" and "Innocence (Regenerated Version)" being rearrangements, "My Planet" appearing on the Song Nation (2002) charity album, and "Elephant Love" on Doppler (2002) by Atami. "Blade Runner" is technically one-half of a double A-side single.
Tiartrop Fles charted for five weeks on the Oricon, peaking at number nineteen.