On the Anime Nation store, I came across two Ghost in the Shell soundtrack CDs that I am unfamiliar with, does anyone know anything about these CDs and are they really Ghost in the Shell soundtrack CDs.
Ghost in the Shell Otogizoushi Collection 1
image at http://us.st11.yimg.com/store1.yimg.com ... 86_4395273
Ghost in the Shell Otogizoushi Collection 2
image at http://store.yahoo.com/animenation/vpcg-84813.html
To me, it seems like that Anime Nation have placed these audio CDs in the wrong place.
Ghost in the Shell Otogizoushi Collection Soundtrack CDs
Moderator: sonic
- Motoko2030
- Posts: 438
- Joined: Wed Nov 23, 2005 3:31 pm
- Location: Saline, Michigan
looks like it,
Otogizoushi is a seperate anime series.
i've never seen it but some info is here
http://www.animenfo.com/animetitle,1428 ... oushi.html
Otogizoushi is a seperate anime series.
i've never seen it but some info is here
http://www.animenfo.com/animetitle,1428 ... oushi.html
-
- Posts: 170
- Joined: Sun Mar 05, 2006 12:10 am
Yeah, those are Otogi Zoshi soundtracks. The mix-up might be due to the fact that Otogi Zoshi and Ghost in the Shell are both done by Production I.G.
Judging from the cover art, I'd say the first album has music from the first half of Otogi Zoshi, while the second album covers the second half. (I like that show a lot, by the way; I even wear a Hikaru Minamoto t-shirt sometimes.) The first half of the show is set during the Heian Period; the latter part of the series is set in present-day Japan. Hence the schoolgirl uniform on the second album's cover.
Judging from the cover art, I'd say the first album has music from the first half of Otogi Zoshi, while the second album covers the second half. (I like that show a lot, by the way; I even wear a Hikaru Minamoto t-shirt sometimes.) The first half of the show is set during the Heian Period; the latter part of the series is set in present-day Japan. Hence the schoolgirl uniform on the second album's cover.
Such is the soul in the body: this world is like her little turf of grass, and the heaven o'er our heads, like her looking-glass, only gives us a miserable knowledge of the small compass of our prison. - Bosola, in John Webster's The Duchess of Malfi