Английская Википедия:But/Aishō

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BUT / Aishou (愛証 / Love Proof) is singer-songwriter Koda Kumi's 35th single and was released on March 14, 2007. It was her first single of 2007 and first to bring her new era, Kingdom. The single was a limited purchase, only being sold from March 2007 to May 2007. It charted No. 2 on Oricon and stayed on the charts for fourteen weeks.[1] The single was released the same day as her third compilation album, Best ~Bounce & Lovers~, which was also of limited release.

Information

BUT/Aishou is Kumi Koda's first single to bring in the era of Kingdom and charted No. 2 on Oricon. The single was of a limited release and was released the same day as her third compilation album, Best ~Bounce & Lovers~. One week later, an "analog version" was released, which contained the "Drum n' Bass" remix.[2] This was the only edition to carry the remix.

Kumi described the song BUT as having the overall message of embracing who you are and not being afraid to show the world the real you. The music video had many homosexual overtones and, due to this, she became a gay rights activist among fans.

BUT was used as the theme song to the Japanese editions of the film Step Up.[3] Aishou became the theme to the drama Ai no Rukeichi.[4]

BUT is certified triple platinum as a ringtone and platinum as a digital download to cellphones by the RIAJ: 3× platinum for ringtone and platinum for cellphone.[5][6] Aishou is certified platinum for downloads, and the single is certified gold for 100,000 copies shipped to stores.[7][8]

Music video

The music video for BUT consisted of Kumi being chained to the ceiling by a pulley. She attempted to break free of the chain and celebrates when she does. Once free, she becomes more provocative and descends in an elevator to a new room. Throughout the video, there are hints of homosexuality, including Kumi in close proximity to another woman. The overall theme was breaking from societal norms and being who you are.

The music video for Aishou was set in Feudal-era Japan within a shiro. The overall theme was of the passion she held with another person.[9]

Track listing

(Source[10])

CD version

Шаблон:Track listing Шаблон:Track listing Шаблон:Track listing Шаблон:Track listing

Charts

Oricon Sales Chart (Japan)

Release Chart Peak Position First Week Sales Sales Total Chart Run
March 14, 2007 Oricon Daily Charts 1
Oricon Weekly Charts 2 63,692 130,890 14 weeks
Oricon Monthly Charts 9
Oricon Yearly Charts 59

Alternate Versions

BUT

  1. BUT: Found on the single (2006) and corresponding album Kingdom (2007)
  2. BUT [The Ghettobots remix]: Found on the single (2006)
  3. BUT [Instrumental]: Found on the single (2006)
  4. BUT [Drum n' Bass Remix]: Found on the "analog version" of the single (2006)
  5. BUT [Mitomi Tokoto Big Room Remix]: Found on Koda Kumi Driving Hit's (2009)
  6. BUT [KOZM Remix]: Found on Koda Kumi Driving Hit's 4 (2012)

Aishou

  1. Aishou: Found on the single (2006) and corresponding album Kingdom (2007)
  2. Aishou [Instrumental]: Found on the single (2006)
  3. Aishou [Shohei Matsumoto & Junichi Matsuda Remix]: Found on Koda Kumi Driving Hit's 4 (2012)

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Koda Kumi Шаблон:Koda Kumi songs

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