Year of release 1991

Songs 2

Album time 8:38

Genre list Pop, Synth Pop

Miki Fujitani's Silent Love: Hitotsuki Hayai Christmas (Remaster) (Maxi-Single) is a compact seasonal release from 1991 built around two tracks and a total running time of 8:38. Filed under Pop and Synth Pop, it brings a very specific holiday framing: Christmas arrives a little early, suggested right in the title track, while the maxi-single format keeps the focus tight. For listeners exploring Japanese winter pop from the early 1990s, this remastered edition presents a brief but clearly shaped end-of-year listen.

The centerpiece is "Silent Love: Hitotsuki Hayai Christmas (2025 Remaster)," a title that immediately places the music in a Christmas setting while also hinting at anticipation, with "hitotsuki hayai" suggesting a month-early holiday mood. That detail makes the song easy to place in festive playlists that start before December is fully underway. Within an 8:38 total duration for the whole release, the track stands as the direct seasonal statement, pairing a romantic winter image with the clean, melodic profile associated here with Pop and Synth Pop.

The second track, "Midori No Kisetsu (2025 Remaster)," gives the maxi-single a companion piece that broadens the mood without breaking the concise two-song structure. Set beside "Silent Love: Hitotsuki Hayai Christmas (2025 Remaster)," it helps the release feel like more than a single seasonal cue, offering another angle for listeners building holiday and winter sets from short, focused releases. Because there are only two tracks, each title remains easy to remember, revisit, and sequence into a New Year or Christmas listening run.

As a 1991 release, Silent Love: Hitotsuki Hayai Christmas (Remaster) (Maxi-Single) sits comfortably in an early 1990s pop context, and its Pop, Synth Pop classification points to a polished, electronic-leaning seasonal atmosphere rather than orchestral holiday music. That makes it useful for cozy evening listening when a festive playlist needs something concise and bright instead of a long album program. The remaster naming on both tracks also gives this edition a clear identity, with "2025 Remaster" attached to each song in the track list.

For Christmas and end-of-year listening, the appeal here is its precision. Miki Fujitani delivers a two-track release that states its seasonal purpose directly through "Silent Love: Hitotsuki Hayai Christmas (2025 Remaster)" and supports it with "Midori No Kisetsu (2025 Remaster)." In just 8:38, the maxi-single can slip easily between longer holiday albums, winter pop selections, or reflective New Year playlists. It is a small release, but its title, genre, year, and compact track list make its place in seasonal catalog browsing immediately clear.