A Cruel Angel's Thesis. " A Cruel Angel's Thesis " (残酷な天使のテーゼ Zankoku na tenshi no tēze) is the opening theme song of the 1995 television anime series, Neon Genesis Evangelion, originally performed by Yoko Takahashi .
CBR ranked "A Cruel Angel's Thesis" as the best theme song of the 1990s and the third-most beautiful of all time, and WatchMojo placed it as the second-catchiest theme song ever.
Hayashibara stated while singing "The Cruel Angel's Thesis", she thought of the scene in which Rei smiles for the first time at Shinji Ikari in the film version of Eva. Megumi Ogata, Shinji's voice actor, performed the song during her concerts.
Neon Genesis EvangelionIt was written for the opening theme of the anime television series Neon Genesis Evangelion, and was released as a double-A-sided single with "Fly Me to the Moon", the show's closing theme, on October 25, 1995. "The Cruel Angel's Thesis" was also included on the series' soundtrack releases and on Takahashi's albums.
The song itself is so popular that it's been a consistent top song for karaoke in Japan since the show debuted. Meanwhile, the internet gains at least one piano cover by a fan each day. Knowing the context of the show, it does beg the question of how the song could reach and endure the popularity it has for so long.
The Netflix version of Evangelion doesn't feature the iconic covers of Frank Sinatra's “Fly Me to the Moon” that played during the end credits of the original show. The song has long been synonymous with the show, but now it has been replaced with a plunky, dramatic piano piece.
anime_irl on Twitter: "Skipping Cruel Angel's Thesis is a punishable war crime.
Ya Boy Kongming! has been one of the season's nicer surprises, and the OP gets each episode off to an immaculate start.4 Cha-La Head-Cha-La (Dragon Ball Z)5 Again (Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood) ... 6 Dream Of Life (Bakuman) ... 7 Oath Sign (Fate/Zero) ... 8 Colors (Code Geass) ... 9 Moonlight Densetsu (Sailor Moon) ... 10 Fly High!! ... More items...•
But its deliberate subversion of anime conventions and audience expectations was what made it so popular. In Japan, Evangelion spawned countless anime tropes, and moreover provided a template for integrating stylish genre tropes with serious themes, high artistic aspirations, and deep characterization.
To the dismay of those who love ending credits, Netflix's release also omitted Evangelion's iconic, karaoke-style renditions of Bart Howard's “Fly Me to the Moon” from its American release.
It all started with Netflix removing the covers of the song "Fly Me to the Moon" at the end of each episode, a change which The Wrap says is due to licensing fees.
Netflix Removed 'Fly Me to the Moon' From 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' and Fans Aren't Happy. Fans were thrilled for the release of popular '90s anime series Neon Genesis Evangelion on Netflix on Friday.
The Straightforward / Modernist Interpretation: The events of Neon Genesis Evangelion are meant to be taken at face value and understood literally. The story is about man's struggles with both God and technology and humanity's experience of both joy and pain.
"A Cruel Angel's Thesis" (残酷な天使のテーゼ, "Zankoku na Tenshi no Tēze", "Zankoku na Tenshi no These"in Japan) is the theme song of the popular anime Neon Genesis Evangelion performed by Yoko Takahashi.
Oikama took inspiration for the title from the manga A Cruel God Reigns.
Since this song's release in 1995, lyricist Neko Oikawa and composer Toshiyuki Omori would not collaborate for another 23 years. In 2018, the two came back together to create " Fighting Gold ", the eighth opening for the JoJo's Bizarre Adventure TV Anime.
Anno originally wanted to use an excerpt from Borodin's Polovtsian Dances in the opening, but the producers did not approve of this and instead decided to use a J-Pop song, which eventually resulted in the creation of "A Cruel Angel's Thesis".
She was orientated that the show was "difficult and philosphical". Oikama described it as: "older women", "mothers" and "14-year-old boys and girls", and decided to make it about the perspective of a mother when her child "leaves the nest".
Notes and references. During the instrumental break in the middle of the song, a chorus can be heard. The lyrics to the chorus are not in Japanese, nor in any other recognizable language. According to the January 1996 issue of Newtype magazine, the lyrics can be phonetically transliterated into Japanese as 「ファリィア。.
Singer Yoko Takahashi. In a survey by TV Asahi that was used to determine the results of a list of the 100 unforgettable anime theme songs, "A Cruel Angel's Thesis" made it to #55. In a later survey on a similar program on TV Asahi, it was included as the #18 song amongst anime released during the 1990s.
Theme song of the anime Neon Genesis Evangelion. 1995 single by Yoko Takahashi. "A Cruel Angel's Thesis". Original anime edition cover of "Zankoku na tenshi no tēze"/" Fly Me to the Moon ". Single by Yoko Takahashi. from the album Neon Genesis Evangelion.
For "The Cruel Angel's Thesis", Gainax made a ninety-second opening video that was animated by Takeshi Honda and Shinya Hasegawa. The production took some time; it was still unfinished in July 1995, when the first two episodes were premiered at the company's second festival. The music video was completed in September of the same year, shortly before the anime premiered on TV Tokyo…
During the production of Neon Genesis Evangelion, the show's director Hideaki Anno suggested using an existing piece of classical music as the series' opening theme. He first chose the Polovtsian Dances from the opera Prince Igor by Russian composer Aleksander Borodin. TV Tokyo rejected the proposal, judging such a piece unsuitable for the show; a classical composition from Prince Igor would have been, according to the producers, "unclear". Neon Genesis Evangelion pr…
Neko Oikawa was given the task of writing the lyrics; Ōtsuki instructed her to write something "philosophical" and to use complicated language. She focused on the key concepts of "mother", "boys and girls of fourteen" and "an adult woman". Oikawa, following the directives, completed the song in two hours, after having received few details of the anime and without having met Hidetos…
On October 25, 1995, "The Cruel Angel's Thesis" was released as a single in two versions: in the first one, with a cover price of ¥1,049, it was accompanied by a song by Takahashi entitled "Tsuki no meikyū" (月の迷宮, lit. ("Moon's labyrinth")); the second version, with a cover price of ¥961 yen, includes "Fly Me to the Moon" performed by Claire Littley, the show's closing theme song. The second version was reissued on March 26, 2003, for the release of the Renewal Edition of Neon …