【中森明菜】LIAR – 純白ロングドレス 4K60 (Remastered / Psychedelic Visual) Akina Nakamori “LIAR” Pure White Dress
[拍手] [音楽] [音楽] [音楽] の月き明かり こな さも のせだと 思ってた 1つ嘘でまた1つ嘘つく 勝てな人など 許せない。 あ、 君のように [音楽] 行こさ [音楽] ずあなた 消えてた。 らなけばいいと思う んだと は 見られたくないわ。次の朝は1人目召る は悪い 夢 [音楽] [音楽] な画面から誰か叫んでる。 なる顔したアクト [音楽] 魔の住み塗り替えたビルが光るけど錆び てく心は変わらない。 自分によりを [音楽] 大し 誰かがいるなら教えて もう あなただけに縛られないわ。 選んでも次の朝は人目覚める 。 はゆ のHe. [音楽]
Akina Nakamori – “LIAR” (1989) | 4K60 Remaster Tribute – Pure White Dress, Surreal Beach, and the Light of Sincerity
“LIAR” stands as Akina Nakamori’s 23rd single, released on April 25, 1989, written by Mitsuko Shiramine and composed by Kazuya Izumi. It marked the closing of the Shōwa era and the dawn of Heisei, reaching #1 on the Oricon chart with over 270,000 copies sold. The single’s haunting elegance made it the final vinyl release of her career, before Japan transitioned entirely to CDs.
The song later appeared on her fourteenth studio album “CRUISE” (July 25, 1989), recorded at The Hit Factory in New York and fully art-directed by Akina herself. She shaped every aspect—the aesthetic, all surreal stages for LIAR, the emotional tonality—crafting a world of purity and detachment. The single version features a flute, while the album version replaces it with a violin, subtly transforming its emotional color.
“LIAR” reflects a moment of existential fracture, composed during Akina’s seven-year relationship with Masahiko Kondo (近藤真彦). The media frenzy around Kondo’s rumored affair with Seiko Matsuda in New York wounded Akina deeply. Already exhausted by family tensions and a harsh entertainment system, she turned her pain into art. This song—selected with care—became her quiet confession, a storm disguised as serenity.
On July 11, 1989, three months after the single’s release, Akina attempted suicide at Kondo’s Roppongi residence. Found collapsed and rushed to the hospital, she underwent six hours of surgery to reconnect severed arteries and nerves. The tabloid press covered the event with cruelty, printing headlines such as “Popular singer Akina, suicide at Kondo’s house”—with “attempted” written in tiny letters. It shocked a nation that adored her.
On December 31, 1989, Akina appeared beside Kondo at the now-famous Golden Folding Screen Press Conference (金屏風前会見). Tearful, she apologized publicly, saying, “I deeply apologize for causing concern due to this unpleasant incident.” The nation stopped. That night, Japan’s annual NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen hit its lowest ratings in history as everyone watched her trembling grace before the gold screens. The image remains one of the most haunting in Japanese pop culture.
It later emerged that Akina had already faced two previous suicide attempts in 1985—one with sleeping pills, another by self-harm—revealing years of emotional fatigue. In a 1995 interview for Marco Polo magazine, she spoke with clarity and honesty about betrayal, financial manipulation within her family, and the loneliness of fame. “I started working for my family at 17,” she said. “They believed what the company told them, but not me. I became unable to trust anyone.” Despite everything, her words were not bitter, only profoundly human.
The Golden Folding Screen press conference remains one of the most disturbing moments in Japanese media history. Forcing a woman who had just survived a suicide attempt to apologize publicly was a violent act — not an act of compassion, nor feminism, but control. It stripped Akina of privacy, turning her pain into spectacle. This imposed humiliation only deepened her isolation and distrust of the media world. Years later, she would rise again with unbalance+balance (1993), a phoenix-like artistic rebirth, transforming suffering into luminous strength.
The performance of “LIAR” embodies that humanity. On stage, Akina appears in her pure white long dress (純白ロングドレス), surrounded by abstract, dreamlike scenery—a symbolic beach where light dissolves into memory. Her voice trembles yet holds unbreakable control. Even in her fragility, she remains powerful, commanding, almost divine. It is the portrait of a woman who refuses to be destroyed by the cruelty around her.
After the crisis, Akina did not vanish. She rebuilt herself through silence and resilience, returning to music with even deeper conviction. “LIAR” was not her end—it was her rebirth through vulnerability, sincerity, and courage.
Technical & Historical Notes
Lyrics: Mitsuko Shiramine
Composition: Kazuya Izumi
Label: Warner Pioneer / Reprise
Album: Cruise (1989)
Recording: The Hit Factory, New York
Weekly rank: #1 / Annual rank: #28
Sales: ~274,670 copies
Direction & Visual Concept: Akina Nakamori
4K Restoration & Editing: MaleficWizard
In December 1989, Warner Pioneer planned to reissue all Akina’s albums from 1982–1988 as GOLD CDs (¥3600), but the project was canceled. Thus, only Best I, Best II, Cruise, and Akina East Live Index-XXIII exist as official GOLD CDs—rare treasures for collectors.
This 4K60 remaster is an offering to Akina’s legacy: the echo of her purity, the strength behind her fragility, and the eternal truth of her art.
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