Hitonotame Front Cover

Hitonotame

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This track draws inspiration from the ironic structure of the Japanese language, where the phrase "for others' sake" literally constructs the character for "falsehood" . Through literary yet provocative lyrics, it explores the self-love hidden behind altruism, the self-satisfaction disguised as goodwill, and the multilayered structure of hypocrisy.
Quoting Oscar Wilde's paradox that "sincerity is the ultimate hypocrisy," the work questions contemporary notions of "righteousness." In the seemingly selfish declaration of "doing what I want to do," the track reveals Rei-ichi no Aida's characteristic art-for-art's-sake approach, finding authenticity in apparent selfishness.
Sonically, the track features driving piano influenced by Japanese alternative rock and an emotionally charged guitar solo. AI vocalist kuu's transparent voice lends an unexpected beauty to the cynical lyrics.
This is perhaps the purest expression of Rei-ichi no Aida's philosophy that "everything is fake, and originals don't exist." The self-referential structuredenying hypocrisy while acknowledging that denial itself might be hypocriticalconfronts listeners with the fundamental question: "What is true kindness?"