Eleven (B'z album)

Eleven is the eleventh studio album by the Japanese rock duo B'z, released on December 6, 2000. The album sold only 756,910 copies in its first week, becoming the first full-length studio album not to sell a million copies in its first week since Risky. However, the album managed to sell over 1,132,180 copies.

Eleven
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 6, 2000
Recorded2000 (Birdman West, Gardenia Studio, Ocean Way Recording, Sound Image Studios)
Genre
Length54:39
LabelRooms Records
ProducerTak Matsumoto
B'z chronology
Brotherhood
(1999)
Eleven
(2000)
Green
(2002)
Singles from Eleven
  1. "Kon'ya Tsuki no Mieru Oka ni"
    Released: February 9, 2000
  2. "May"
    Released: May 24, 2000
  3. "Juice"
    Released: July 12, 2000
  4. "Ring"
    Released: October 4, 2000

Track listing

  1. "  I  " – 0:24
  2. "Seventh Heaven" – 4:10
  3. "信じるくらいいいだろう" [Shinjiru Kurai Ii Darou] – 3:39
  4. "Ring" – 3:59
  5. "愛のprisoner" [Ai no prisoner] – 4:09
  6. "煌めく人" [Kirameku Hito] – 2:57
  7. "May" – 4:19
  8. "Juice (PM mix)" – 4:02
  9. "Raging River" – 7:32
  10. "Tokyo Devil" – 3:25
  11. "コブシヲニギレ" [KOBUSHIWONIGIRE] – 4:32
  12. "Thinking of You" – 4:30
  13. "扉" [Tobira] – 2:51
  14. "今夜月の見える丘に -Alternative Guitar Solo ver.-" [Konya Tsuki no Mieru Oka ni] – 4:10

Personnel

Additional personnel

  • Akihito Tokunaga (clavinet) - Track 2
  • Akira Onozuka (acoustic piano) - Track 4, 7, 9, 14
  • Brian Tichy (drums) - Track 2, 5, 8
  • Daisuke Ikeda (strings arrangement) - Track 4, 9
  • Fingers (bass) - Track 8
  • Futoshi Kobayashi (trumpet) - Track 2
  • Hideo Yamaki (drums) - Track 4, 9, 12
  • Kaichi Kurose (drums) - Track 3, 6, 10, 11, 13
  • Katsunori "hakkai" Hatakeyama (Chinese gong) - Track 10
  • Kazuki Katsuta (saxophone) - Track 2
  • Koji "Kiratoh" Nakamura (bass) - Track 4, 12, 14
  • Masao Akashi (bass) - Track 3, 6, 10, 11
  • Shinozaki Strings (strings) - Track 4, 9
  • Shiro Sasaki (trumpet) - Track 2
  • Showtaro Mitsuzono (bass) - Track 13
  • Tama Chorus (mixed chorus) - Track 9
  • Vagabond Suzuki (bass) - Track 7, 9
  • Wakaba Kawai (trombone) - Track 2
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gollark: It's a weird restriction, considering that presumably if you can engineer an entire missile you can also work out a way around restrictions in GPS hardware, to be honest.
gollark: Apparently the US was worried about GPS being used by enemy ICBMs (???) so now consumer GPS devices will refuse to work above certain speeds/heights.
gollark: You can do GPS with RTL-SDRs apparently, which gets around the weird height/speed restrictions in consumer devices.
gollark: There's interesting stuff with satellites and whatnot, but that needs a lot of hardware.
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