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The discography of Tokio, a Japanese rock/pop band, consists of twelve studio albums, one cover album, one remix album, three compilation albums, one mini album, and more than fifty singles released under Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music, and J Storm.
This is a list of the top-selling albums in Japan, based on data compiled by Oricon. Prior to January 1987, the domestic albums chart was separated into LPs (created in 1970), cassette tapes (introduced in 1974) and compact discs (launched in 1985), until their unification, which remains the current form. It is worth noting that Oricon only ...
The Tokio single "Get Your Dream" was used as the theme song in Japan for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. [1] Later in 2006, the group released their longest studio album to date, Harvest, containing seventeen tracks and two remix tracks. In 2008, Tokio's shortest album was released, titled Sugar. The seven-track album contains the three singles ...
"Tokyo" by Bruce Cockburn (from his album Humans; #44 on RPM in 1980) "Tokyo" by B'z (from their album Love Me, I Love You) "Tokyo" by Carola Häggkvist "Tokyo" by Chips "Tokyo" by Classix Nouveaux "Tokyo" by Danny Saucedo (from his album Heart Beats) "Tokyo" by Darrell Mansfield Band "Tokyo" by David Boydell "Tokyo" by Dirty Looks "Tokyo" by ...
The discography of British art pop/new wave band Japan, including their reformation as Rain Tree Crow, consists of six studio albums, seventeen compilation albums, one live album, and four video releases.
Tokyo Singing (東京シンギング, Tōkyō Shingingu) is the fifth studio album by Japanese band Wagakki Band.It was released on October 14, 2020 through Universal Sigma in six editions: a two-CD release with an instrumental disc, streaming, a first edition release with 144-page photo book, and three first edition releases with optional DVD or Blu-ray discs.
Taylor Swift had fans convinced they would hear music from her upcoming album, The Tortured Poets Department, months before its release. During a performance in Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday, February ...
By 1972, Deep Purple had achieved considerable commercial success in Japan, including several hit singles, so it made sense to tour there. [12] Three dates were booked; the Festival Hall, Osaka on 11 and 12 May, and the Budokan, Tokyo on 16 May, [13] though these were later changed to 15 and 16 August, and 17 August respectively due to an earlier US tour being rescheduled. [14]