60s 70s 80s

60s 70s 80s is a triple A-side single, Namie Amuro's 33rd solo single under the Avex Trax label.[2] It was released in CD and CD&DVD formats on March 12, 2008, 11 months since her previous single "Funky Town", and nearly nine months after her successful album Play. This single continues her successful comeback, as it had her highest first week sales since 2000's "Never End" even at a time when CD single sales are dramatically decreasing. It became her first #1 since 1998's "I Have Never Seen", and her highest selling single since "Never End".

"60s 70s 80s"
Single by Namie Amuro
from the album Best Fiction
ReleasedMarch 12, 2008 (2008-03-12)
LabelAvex Trax
Producer(s)
Namie Amuro singles chronology
"Funky Town"
(2007)
"60s 70s 80s"
(2008)
"Wild / Dr."
(2009)
Alternative cover
CD+DVD cover

Overview

"60s 70s 80s" is the 33rd single and the first triple A-Side single released by Amuro Namie, and contains a total of three songs, "New Look", "Rock Steady", and "What a Feeling". Each of these three songs is used in a massive campaign ad for Vidal Sassoon's latest shampoo and conditioner products. In addition, each song represents a certain time period starting with the 1960s, then 1970's, and finally 1980's.

The first song, "New Look", represents the 1960s and features a sample from The Supremes's "Baby Love". Like many of her other single songs, this song is produced by T.Kura and Michico. "Rock Steady" represents the 1970s and features a sample from Aretha Franklin's song "Rock Steady". It is produced by Michico and Muro, whose last working with Namie was during her Suite Chic project. The last song, "What a Feeling" represents the 1980s and features samples from Irene Cara's "What a Feeling", which was used as the theme for the 1983 film Flashdance. Shinichi Osawa and Michico worked on the production of "What a Feeling".

Namie first performed these songs on January 17, 2008 in front of a selected audience of 150 people. Her second official performance of these songs is in the second leg of her tour PLAY More 07-08. The promotional videos of "New Look" and "Rock Steady" were released in January, with the video for "What a Feeling" premiering on March 1 on MTV.

In just two days, this single surpassed the first week sales of "Baby Don't Cry", her best selling single since "Say the Word" in 2001 despite not reaching the #1 position on the dailies by its release. However, within four days of its release the single reached the #1 spot on the charts. This became Namie's first #1 on the Oricon Daily Chart since 2004's, "Girl Talk / The Speed Star". The single debuted at #2 on the weekly charts with over 114,000 copies sold and became Amuro's highest first week sales since 2000's "Never End". A week after its release, the single reached #1 on the weekly chart, making it Amuro's 10th number one single and her first number one single in 10 years. By its third week of release however, the single reached #2 on the Oricon charts, being kicked off the top position by 20th Century's Ore Ja Nakya, Kimi Ja Nakya by a mere 1,686 copies.

Track list

Disc 1: CD
No.TitleLyricsMusicArranger(s)Length
1."New Look" (sample: The Supremes' "Baby Love" from 1964)Michico, Lamont Dozier, Brian Holland, Eddie HollandT.Kura, Michico, Lamont Dozier, Brian Holland, Eddie HollandT.Kura for Giant Swing Productions3:58
2."Rock Steady" (sample: Aretha Franklin's "Rock Steady" from 1971)Michico, Aretha FranklinMuro, Michico, Aretha FranklinMuro (King of Diggin' Production)3:29
3."What a Feeling" (sample: Irene Cara's "Flashdance... What a Feeling" from 1983)Michico, Keith Forsey, Irene CaraShinichi Osawa, Michico, Giorgio MoroderShinichi Osawa (Mondo Grosso)3:49
4."New Look" (instrumental)   4:00
5."Rock Steady" (instrumental)   3:31
6."What a Feeling" (instrumental)   3:47
Disc 2: DVD
No.TitleDirector(s)Length
1."New Look" (music video)Yuichi Kodama 
2."Rock Steady" (music video)Yusuke Tanaka 
3."What a Feeling" (music video)Takeshi Nakamura 

Personnel

  • "New Look"
    • Namie Amuro – vocals
    • Namie Amuro, Tiger, Michico – background vocals
    • T.Kura – all instruments
  • "Rock Steady"
    • Namie Amuro – vocals
    • SUI – programming & keys
  • "What a Feeling"
    • Namie Amuro – vocals
    • Shinichi Osawa – all instruments

Production

  • "New Look"
    • Producer – T.Kura
    • Vocal Producer – Michico
    • Director – Yuichi Kodama
    • Choreographer – Moritsune Morita, Nami Segawa, & Raymond Johnson
  • "Rock Steady"
    • Producer – Muro
    • Vocal Producer – Michico
    • Director – Yusuke Tanaka
    • Choreographer – Shun
  • "What a Feeling"
    • Producer – Shinichi Osawa
    • Vocal Producer – Michico
    • Director – Takeshi Nakamura
    • Choreographer – Tetsuharu

Release history

Region Date
Japan March 12, 2008 (2008-03-12)
South Korea March 19, 2008 (2008-03-19)

TV performances

  • March 10, 2008 – Hey! Hey! Hey! Music Champ
  • March 21, 2008 – Music Fighter
  • March 23, 2008 – CDTV
  • March 27, 2008 – Utaban
  • April 5, 2008 – Music Fair 21
  • November 27, 2008 – Best Hit Songs Festival 2008
  • December 16, 2008 – Best Artist 2008
  • December 30, 2008 – Japan Record Awards
  • January 1, 2009 – CDTV Countdown Live 2008-2009

Charts

Oricon Sales Chart (Japan)

Release Chart Peak position First week sales Sales total
March 12, 2008 Oricon Daily Singles Chart 1
Oricon Weekly Singles Chart 1 114,719 293,097
Oricon Monthly Singles Chart 1
Oricon Yearly Singles Chart 18

Billboard Japan Chart

Chart Peak
position
Billboard Japan Hot 100 1 (New Look)
Billboard Japan Hot 100 Airplay 14 (New Look) / 19 (What a Feeling)
Billboard Japan Hot Singles Sales 1

RIAJ certification

"60s 70s 80s" has been certified platinum for shipments of over 250,000 by the Recording Industry Association of Japan.[3]

gollark: Fun fact: the horse raced past the barn fell.
gollark: I forgot the "say" by accident.
gollark: The old man the boat.
gollark: I painted the wall with cracks yesterday.
gollark: Unrelatedly, did you know that the prime number few?

References

  1. "New Singleタイトル決定!". Archived from the original on 21 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
  2. "Information Amuro Namie Official Website". Archived from the original on 1 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
  3. ゴールド等認定作品認定 2008年3月 (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 17 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-04.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.