Space K.K.

"Space K.K." is a K.K. Slider song first introduced in.

The cover depicts the word "minimal" ("Space K.K." in ) on top of nine frames containing pictures of K.K. Slider, which are all the same except for a picture in the bottom left of the cover, which features his eyes closed.

Eunice, Marshal, Flo, Bertha, Wendy, and Julian (the latter two in ) will have this song playing in their homes.

The song's Japanese name, translating to 'Minimal Music,' is a reference to minimalist music, a postmodern genre that originated from America in the 1960s; fitting for minimalism, the song contains sparse, repeated melodies with limited amounts of instruments. However, unlike the classically-based music that defined minimalism in its original form, "Space K.K." is more rooted in the electronic minimalism characteristic of mid-to-late 1970's works in the genre such as Discreet Music and Low by British art rock musicians Brian Eno and David Bowie, respectively.