Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)

"Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)" (かわらないこと~since1976~, Unchanging Thing (Since 1976)) is Kokia's 9th single, released on May 21, 2003.[1] It is Kokia's second most commercially successful single after "The Power of Smile/Remember the Kiss," due to being used as the daytime TV drama Itoshiki Mono e's theme song.[2][3]

"Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)"
Single by Kokia
from the album Remember Me
ReleasedMay 21, 2003 (2003-05-21)
GenreJ-pop
Length4:57
LabelVictor Entertainment
Songwriter(s)Kokia
Producer(s)Taisuke Sawachika
Kokia singles chronology
"Ningen tte Sonna Mono ne"
(2002)
"Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)"
(2003)
"The Power of Smile/Remember the Kiss"
(2003)

Background

This single was the Kokia's first to be released under Victor Entertainment management, after being managed under Gai Records for her second album Trip Trip and Pony Canyon for her debut Songbird.[4] Previous to this single, Kokia had found severely limited chart success. Despite releasing two albums and 8 singles, only one of these had charted at all, "Aishiteiru Kara" at #99.[3]

Promotion

Other than "Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)" being featured in Itoshiki Mono e, the single was promoted in a variety of ways. The B-side "Tell Tell Bōzu" was used as the second ending theme song to the anime Hungry Heart: Wild Striker.[5] Kokia was featured in many music-related and fashion-related magazines in May 2003, such as "Barfout," "Caz," "CD Hits," "Gekkan Piano," "Girl Pop," "Grand Magasin," "What's In?" and "Zappy."[5]

Composition

"Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)" is a mid-tempo pop song, featuring a sparse piano, percussion and occasional strings arrangement. The two choruses, however, feature a band arrangement with added guitars and percussion. The lyrics express somebody thanking a person they have been watching over and protecting for making them realise how much they loved them, despite being unable to express this to them. The lyrics ask the person's beloved to "instead of say thank you, look at me."[6]

Music video

Kokia in the music video for "Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)."

The music video was directed by Jun Hara (原淳).[7] The majority of the clip is made up of double exposed shots spliced together. In these shots, there three main sequences: one featuring Kokia and a man dressed in black in a brown field, one featuring Kokia in a tall room with flowing curtains in which she sings the song, and one in which a child holds a red ball in an alleyway, as Kokia stands near to him. Other scenes the child, as well as of the house with tall, flowing curtains are shown. One distinctive shot in the piece is in the brown field, where a small green plant with red flowers is shown near the beginning and ending of the clip. At the beginning, there is only one flower, however at the end there are two.

Reception

The song debuted at #49 in its first week, selling 4,000 copies.[3] A long selling single, it charted in the low top 50 for four weeks, peaking at #47.[3] After seven weeks in the top 100 and an additional four between 100 and 200, the single managed to sell a total of 26,000 copies.[3]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Arranger(s)Length
1."Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976)"KokiaTaisuke Sawachika4:57
2."Tell Tell Bōzu (tell tell 坊主, Tell Tell Teru Teru Bōzu)"KokiaSawachika5:00
3."Kawaranai Koto (Since 1976) (Instrumental Version)"KokiaSawachika4:57
4."Tell Tell Bōzu (Instrumental Version)"KokiaSawachika4:57
Total length:19:51

Japan Sales Rankings[3]

Release Chart Peak Position First Week Sales Sales Total Chart Run
May 21, 2003 (2003-05-21) Oricon daily singles chart
Oricon weekly singles chart 47 4,200 26,000 11 weeks
Oricon yearly singles chart
gollark: Er, no, for `i`, I mean.
gollark: The modulus bit is only present for `ii`.
gollark: No.
gollark: Mine? Yes, on `ii`.
gollark: Hmm, can I declare a new language to write in? Brotlipython™. To interpret it, you just run the source file through `brotli` decompression then interpret it as python.

References

  1. "KOKIA|かわらないこと~since1976~|@Victor Entertainment" (in Japanese). Victor Entertainment. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  2. "Kokia  タイアップ". CDJournal (in Japanese). Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  3. "オリコンランキング情報サービス「you大樹」". Oricon. Retrieved 2010-06-06. (subscription only)
  4. "KOKIA|Remember me|@Victor Entertainment" (in Japanese). Victor Entertainment. Retrieved 2010-03-18.
    - "KOKIA|trip trip|@Victor Entertainment" (in Japanese). Victor Entertainment. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
    - "Archived copy" プロフィール (in Japanese). Kokia Web. Archived from the original on 2010-02-05. Retrieved 2010-06-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "KOKIA OFFICIAL WEB SITE - INFORMATION". Mother Land (in Japanese). 2006. Archived from the original on 2010-03-30. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  6. ""かわらないこと~since 1976~ - KOKIA 歌詞情報 - goo 音楽"" (in Japanese). Goo Ongaku. Archived from the original on 2011-06-14. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  7. "KOKIA 楽曲名 かわらないこと~since1976~". Space Shower (in Japanese). Retrieved 2010-04-15.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.