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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.
"Tokyo" by Athlete (from their album Beyond the Neighbourhood) "Tokyo" by Attack "Tokyo" by Base Ball Bear (from their album Detective Boys) "Tokyo" by The Books "Tokyo" by Brian Ice "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 ...
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 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.
The top music artists in Japan include Japanese artists with claims of 15 million or more record sales or with over 2 million subscribers. Japan is the largest physical music market in the world and the second largest overall behind the United States, and the biggest in Asia, according to International Federation of the Phonographic Industry .
The band's resulting debut studio album Game (2008) was a great success, becoming certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of Japan. [3] After releasing the albums Triangle (2009) and JPN (2011), featuring the commercially successful songs "Love the World" (2008), "Dream Fighter" (2008), "One Room Disco" (2009) and "Voice ...
The live album was originally released on 15 August 1978 [1] [2] in Japan only, with a cover artwork of an embossed platinum scorpion set on a rose, as opposed to a live shot of the band when it was eventually released in Europe in December 1978. It was released in the US in January 1979.
The album was intended for release only in Japan but with strong airplay of the promotional album From Tokyo to You, an estimated 30,000 import copies were sold in the United States and the album was released domestically in February 1979. [3] The album also introduced two previously unreleased original songs, "Lookout" and "Need Your Love".