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Utada hosted listening parties at select Sephora beauty and cosmetics stores in Los Angeles on March 24, in New York on March 25, and in Miami on March 27 to further promote the album. [16] On March 23, the music video for the lead single "Come Back to Me" was released as the 'Free Music Video of the Week' on the U.S. iTunes Store.
Utada Hikaru Exodus: 2004 English "Apple and Cinnamon" Utada Hikaru Utada Hikaru This Is the One: 2009 English "Arashi no Megami# (嵐の女神; Storm Goddess)" Utada Hikaru Utada Hikaru Utada Hikaru Single Collection Vol. 2: 2010 Japanese "Another Chance" Utada Hikaru Utada Hikaru First Love: 1999 Japanese "Automatic" † Utada Hikaru Utada Hikaru
Lucas Villa from Axs.com commended Utada's lyrical and vocal delivery, saying that the lyrics "got her point across on the battle-born dance track." [ 8 ] A reviewer from CD Journal gave the song a mixed review, complimenting Utada's song writing for portraying "real intentions" and praising the song's "fluctuation" of composition but also ...
Hikaru Utada (宇多田ヒカル, Utada Hikaru, born January 19, 1983), also known mononymously as Utada, [2] is a Japanese and American singer, songwriter, and producer. She [ a ] is considered to be one of the most influential and best-selling musical artists in Japan.
"I'm on TikTok all the time, that's probably the app I watch 24/7, all day, and you can really see what song is poppin' by watching TikTok," Williams tells ET, of how they landed on the track.
Though it gained little mainstream attention, "Devil Inside" did do well on dance radio and hit number 10 on the Billboard Hot Dance Airplay chart, making it Utada's most played track in the United States until it was surpassed by "Come Back to Me". [1] The single was released on September 14, 2004. No music video was produced.
"Michi" is an up-tempo J-pop song with an arrangement made entirely out of electronic synthesizers and drums. Apart from a few anglicisms and three lines in its chorus, it is completely in Japanese.
The song was written and co-produced by Utada herself, while Akira Miyake and the singer's father Teruzane Utada served as producers. Despite working recording in English under the name Cubic U, "Time Will Tell" is Utada's first Japanese recording, and was released after she enrolled into high school in Japan.