Say Yes (Chage and Aska song)
"Say Yes" is a Japanese single by Chage and Aska, released by Pony Canyon on July 24, 1991. The song was used as a theme of the Japanese television drama 101 kaime no Propose. It was regarded as a wedding song.[1]
"Say Yes" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Chage and Aska | ||||
from the album Tree | ||||
B-side | "Kokuhaku" | |||
Released | July 24, 1991 | |||
Genre | J-pop | |||
Length | 4:44 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Ryo Aska | |||
Chage and Aska singles chronology | ||||
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On the Japanese Oricon weekly single charts, "Say Yes" spent 13 consecutive weeks at the number-one position. The single became the best-selling song for the duo. It sold over 2.82 million copies and is the seventh best-selling single in Oricon charts history.[2]
Cover versions
In 1992, Hong Kong singer Raymond Choi covered this song in Cantonese. Debbie Gibson recorded an English-language cover of the song in her 2010 Japan-only release Ms. Vocalist.
gollark: I think I read somewhere that it wasn't very useful (he3) but i forgot why.
gollark: I too want vast swathes of land to be covered in generators which will not even work half the time because of "night" and "poor weather", which are hilariously energy-expensive to produce in the first place, and which will break after 40 years.
gollark: I mean, in a sense, maybe it is.
gollark: Also, anticentrism seems to imply you'd prefer, say, an extreme ideology in the opposite direction to yours over a generic middling centrist one, which is... odd?
gollark: What do you prefer then, "komrad kit"?
References
- "Chage and Aska". nippop. Retrieved 2008-07-31.
- "SMAP「世界に一つだけの花」、 シングル売上歴代9位に!!" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2004-08-03. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
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