Eve (stylized as EVE) is the debut[lower-alpha 1] studio album of Showta. The album was released on March 5, 2008.
Eve | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | March 5, 2008 (2008-03-05) | |||
Recorded | 2006-2008 | |||
Genre | J-pop | |||
Label | King Records | |||
Showta chronology | ||||
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Singles from Eve | ||||
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Eve is the debut studio album of Showta. The album was released on March 5, 2008 under King Records. The limited edition included a DVD consisting of all music videos released from his first five singles.[3]
Showta described the album as having "different voices", mentioning that he sings from different perspectives in each song, including a "pure-hearted young male protagonist" and a woman.[4] He selected Eve as the title as a reference to Adam and Eve, representing how his performances surpassed gender and allowing him to sing from the sound and perspective of a woman.[5]
Aside from containing new original songs, Eve compiles songs from Showta's previous singles released from 2006 to 2008. His debut single, "Negaiboshi", first released on July 26, 2006,[6] was described as being sung from the perspective of a "pure-hearted young male protagonist."[4] Other singles included "Trans-winter (Fuyu no Mukōgawa)", which was used as the theme song to the live-action television adaptation of Damens Walker;[7] "Hito Shizuku"; "Kimi ni, Kaze ga Fukimasu Yō ni", the ending theme song to Ichiteru!;[8] and a cover of Yoshie Kashiwabara's 1983 song "Haru na no ni."[9]
Along with "Haru na no ni", the album also included cover renditions of other songs, such as Caoli Cano's 1995 song "Gozen Ni-ji no Angel", which Showta's producer had wanted to release after having him do demo recordings of several kayōkyoku songs.[4] "Sausage", which was later re-released as a B-side to Showta's 6th single, "Hikaru no Gen-chan", was described as a "warm R&B song."[10]
The album debuted at #115 in the Oricon Weekly Albums Chart, charting for one week.[11]
CDJournal described the album as having a "healing effect" and felt that Showta's clear voice suited the elegant and acoustic sound, recommending his cover renditions of "Gozen Ni-ji no Angel" and "Ichikōnen."[12]
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Arrangement | Length |
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1. | "Negaiboshi" (願い星 lit. Wishing Star) | Masumi Kawamura | Hiroo Yamaguchi |
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2. | "Gozen Ni-ji no Angel" (午前2時のエンジェル lit. Angel at 2 PM) | Caoli Cano | Caoli Cano | ||
3. | "Haru na no ni" (春なのに lit. Even Though It's Spring) | Miyuki Nakajima | Miyuki Nakajima | Masayuki Sakamoto | |
4. | "Tameiki Button" (ため息ボタン lit. Sigh Button) | Mikio Sakai | Mikio Sakai | ||
5. | "Watashi no Haru ga Hajimaru" (私の春がはじまる lit. Spring Begins For Me) | Ren Takayanagi | Kei Yoshikawa | ||
6. | "Yubikiri" (ゆびきり lit. Pinky Promise) | mavie | H-Wonder | ||
7. | "Ichikōnen" (一光年 lit. One Light Year) | Masumi Kawamura | H.Wonder | ||
8. | "Sausage" (ソーセージ) | Jun Ichikawa | Jun Ichikawa | Jun Ichikawa | |
9. | "Trans-winter (Fuyu no Mukōgawa)" (Trans-winter 〜冬のむこう側〜 lit. Trans-winter (The Other Side of Winter)) | Sonomi Tameoka | Sonomi Tameoka | Daisuke Kahara, REO | |
10. | "Kimi ni, Kaze ga Fukimasu You ni" (君に、風が吹きますよ lit. May the Wind Blow Towards You) | Gorō Matsui | Akimitsu Honma | CMJK | |
11. | "Hito Shizuku" (ひとしずく lit. One Drop) | Taiyō Morito, Juli Shono | Hideya Nakazaki | Hideya Nakazaki | |
12. | "Kokuhaku" (告白 lit. Confession) | Masumi Kawamura | Oh Seok-jun | ||
13. | "Negaiboshi" (Winter Version, bonus track) | Masumi Kawamura | Hiroo Yamaguchi |
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Negaiboshi" (promotional video) | |
2. | "Trans-winter (Fuyu no Mukōgawa)" (promotional video) | |
3. | "Hito Shizuku" (promotional video) | |
4. | "Kimi ni, Kaze ga Fukimasu You ni" (promotional video) | |
5. | "Haru na no ni" (promotional video) |
Chart (2008) | Peak
position |
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Oricon Weekly Albums Chart[11] | 115 |
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Studio albums |
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Compilation albums |
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Mini albums | |||||
Other songs |
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Related articles |
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