Field of View III ~Now Here No Where~

Field of View III ~Now Here No Where~ is the third studio album by Japanese group Field of View.[1] The album was released on September 30, 1998 by Zain Records. The album reached #13 on the Oricon chart for first week with 32,790 sold copies. It charted for 4 weeks and sold 49,940 copies.[2][3]

FIELD OF VIEW III ~NOW HERE NO WHERE~
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 30, 1998 (1998-09-30)
Recorded1998
GenreJ-Pop
Length44 minutes
LabelZain Records
ProducerBMF
Field of View chronology
Singles Collection +4
(1997)
FIELD OF VIEW III ~NOW HERE NO WHERE~
(1998)
Lovely Jubbly
(1999)
Singles from FIELD OF VIEW III ~NOW HERE NO WHERE~
  1. "Kawaita Sakebi"
    Released: May 20, 1998
  2. "Meguru Kisetsu wo Koete"
    Released: July 29, 1998
  3. "Kimi wo Terasu Taiyou ni"
    Released: September 23, 1998

Track listing

No.TitleLyricsMusicArranger(s)Length
1."Kaze yo" (風よ)U-ya AsaokaTakuto KohashiDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
3:58
2."Owaranai Koi ~Hitotsu ni naru~" (終わらない恋〜ひとつになれ)U-ya AsaokaKenji NiitsuField of View3:48
3."Kawaita Sakebi" (渇いた叫び)Miho KomatsuMiho KomatsuMasazumi Ozawa (Pamelah)4:37
4."Kimi wo Terasu Taiyou ni" (君を照らす太陽に)U-ya AsaokaTakashi OdaDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
3:55
5."everywhere"U-ya AsaokaTakuto KohashiDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
3:35
6."Kimi ga Inai dake" (君がいないだけ)U-ya AsaokaU-ya AsaokaField of View3:31
7."Natural"U-ya AsaokaU-ya AsaokaDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
4:46
8."Omoidasu yo Kimi no Egao wo" (想い出すよ 君の笑顔を)Kanako OdaKenji NiitsuDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
3:57
9."Nagareru Kumo" (ながれる雲)Takuto KohashiTakuto KohashiDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
4:55
10."I'm thinking a lot of you"U-ya AsaokaU-ya AsaokaDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
3:37
11."Meguru Kisetsu wo Koete" (めぐる季節を越えて)U-ya AsaokaU-ya AsaokaDaisuke Ikeda
Field of View
5:11

Usage in media

  • Kawaita Sakebi was used as the opening theme for the 1998 anime adaptation of Yu-Gi-Oh!
  • Meguru Kisetsu wo Koete was used as the ending theme for the Fuji TV program Unbelievable.
  • Kimi wo Terasu Taiyou Ni was used as the ending theme for the TBS Television program "Uwasa no! Tokyo Magazine".

Cover

A Japanese pop singer and songwriter, Miho Komatsu covered "Kawaita Sakebi" in her 6th studio album Hanano.

gollark: yes.
gollark: That doesn't mean that there aren't other factors, "correlated" doesn't mean "entirely controlled by" or whatever, but they're not meaningless.
gollark: Actual psychological ones and not random internet ones.
gollark: I mean, they correlate decently with various measures of successfulness.
gollark: IQ tests are actually okay?

References

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