Hi Izuru Tokoro (日出処, "The Land of the Rising Sun"), also known as Sunny,[1] is the fifth studio album by Japanese musician Ringo Sheena released on November 5, 2014 by Universal Music Japan sublabel Virgin Records. It is a compilation studio album compiling singles released since 2009 as well as new compositions.[2]
Hi Izuru Tokoro | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | November 5, 2014 | |||
Recorded | 2009–2014 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 50:05 | |||
Language |
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Label | EMI Records Japan (Virgin Records) | |||
Producer | Ringo Sheena | |||
Ringo Sheena chronology | ||||
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Singles from Hi Izuru Tokoro | ||||
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Background and development
editBefore the release of her fourth album Sanmon Gossip in 2009, which celebrated her 10th anniversary, Sheena released the single "Ariamaru Tomi", used for the drama Smile's theme song. Sheena's main musical project during this time was the band Tokyo Jihen, who after Sanmon Gossip released the albums Sports (2010) and Dai Hakken (2011). 2011 saw the release of another solo single by Sheena, "Carnation". The song was commissioned for the asadora Carnation starring Machiko Ono. Sheena had wanted the song to be released by Tokyo Jihen, however the staff involved with the drama specifically requested the song be under her solo stage name. Sheena compromised by having the members of Tokyo Jihen perform the song with her and appear in the music video, however still labelling it as a 'Ringo Sheena' release.[3][4]
In 2011, Tokyo Jihen made the mutual decision to split up, and in 2012 released an extended play called Color Bars, and performed a farewell tour Bon Voyage. After the tour had finished, Sheena released a digital single "Jiyū e Michizure", the theme song for the drama Ataru.[5] In 2013, Sheena began a year of celebration for the 15th anniversary since her debut. This began with the single "Irohanihoheto" / "Kodoku no Akatsuki" in May, two albums released on November 13, 2013: Ukina, a collaboration compilation album and Mitsugetsu-shō, a live compilation album, and ended with Gyakuyunyū: Kōwankyoku, a self-cover album of songs Sheena had written for other musicians.[6]
Writing and production
editIn 2009 after the release of "Ariamari Tomi", Sheena noted that she had started mentioning sunlight more in her lyrics.[7] When it came time to start producing Hi Izuru Tokoro in July 2014, this realisation inspired her to write about mainstream and "main street" society. Sheena wanted to write about events that happen in lit places, as well as those that happened in unlit backstreets. The title was inspired by this realisation.[7][8] Sheena was inspired by Latin music early on in the production process.[8]
Many of the songs feature collaborations with well-known musicians. "Ariamaru Tomi" was composed alongside Barbee Boys songwriter Tomotaka Imamichi, "Jiyū e Michizure" featured Hiroyuki Hayashi of Polysics, Satoshi Ishihara of Going Under Ground and Makoto Sakurai of Dragon Ash performing the song,[9] and "Nippon" featured Shinichi Ubukata of the bands Ellegarden and Nothing's Carved in Stone and studio musician Yukio Nagoshi, who had collaborated in 2009 with Sheena on her song "Yokyō".[10] "Ima" is a song that Sheena had performed live during her Tōtaikai concerts in 2013,[11] however the version that appears on the album is sung in Japanese. "Kodoku no Akatsuki" was sung at the Tōtaikai concerts in a new English language version,[11] which appears on Hi Izuru Tokoro.
Sheena created two session bands to work on the album's new tracks. The first of these was 893 (Hachi Kyū San, "Yakuza"), a band formed to perform her Chotto Shita Reco Hatsu mini-tour in 2014 composed of musicians who had performed with her at her Tōtaikai: Heisei Nijūgo-nendo Kamiyama-chō Taikai concerts in 2013.[11] The band began by recording "Sakasa ni Kazoete" from her "Nippon" (2014) single.[10][12][13] The second was 37564 (Mi Na Go Ro Shi, "Massacre"), which formed to perform the song "Nippon" (2014). It originally featured three guitarists: Sheena, session musician Yukio Nagoshi and Shinichi Ubukata of the bands Ellegarden and Nothing's Carved in Stone. During recording for Hi Izuru Tokoro however, 37564 was made up of Nagoshi and two members of the band 100s, Hiroo Yamaguchi and Tom Tamada.[7]
"Hashire Wa Number" is a collaboration with Masayuki Hiizumi, formerly a member of her band Tokyo Jihen from 2004 to 2005. Hiizumi previously worked with Sheena on her album Sanmon Gossip (2009), arranging the song "Ryūkō".[14][15] "Shizuka Naru Gyakushū" is a song Sheena wrote before her debut in 1998 while she still lived in Fukuoka,[8] previously titled "Kudamono no Heya" (果物の部屋, "Room of Fruit") and given new lyrics.[citation needed] Sheena worked with jazz ensemble and long time collaborators Soil & "Pimp" Sessions on the song "Ima".[7]
The songs were given official European language translations by Sheena. Six of the tracks were given names in English, "Quiet Counterattack", "Collateral Damage", "To the Sea of Trees", "Flight JL005", "Manipulate the Time" and "The Invaluable" respectively for "Shizuka Naru Gyakushū", "Jiyū e Michizure", "Hashire Wa Number", "JL005-bin de", "Chichinpuipui" and "Ariamaru Tomi". Track number four, "Sekidō o Koetara", was given the Portuguese title "Cruzar a linha do equador" ("Crossing the Equator Line"), while the remainder were given French titles: "Présent" ("Present") for "Ima", "Les couleurs chantent" ("The Colours Sing") for "Irohanihoheto", "Une femme ordinaire" ("An Ordinary Woman") for "Arikitari na Onna", "L'œillet" ("The Carnation") for "Carnation" and "La Solitude de l'aube" ("The Solitude of Dawn") for "Kodoku no Akatsuki".[1] The song "Nippon" did not have a title change.
Hi Izuru Tokoro is the first of Sheena's albums as a soloist or with Tokyo Jihen to come packaged with a visual media disc of music videos.[2] Before this album, her solo music videos were released on a series of video albums entitled Sexual Healing, released several months after each studio album.
The album was recorded primarily at Prime Sound Studio Form in Meguro, Tokyo, as well as seven other locations around Tokyo: Onkio Haus, Sound Inn, Studio Sound Valley, Bunkamura Studio, Victor Studio, Aladdin Lounge and Studio Terra.[16]
Cover artwork
editThe album jacket image — which featured a blonde Sheena alongside a Gibson RD guitar — was made on September 7, 2014 by photographer Shoji Uchida with long time collaborator and art director Yutaka Kimura, who was inspired by popular art styles that were prevalent during the 1950s.[17]
Promotion and release
editImmediately after Gyakuyunyū: Kōwankyoku, Sheena released the single "Nippon", a song commissioned by broadcaster NHK for its soccer broadcasts in 2014, beginning with the 2014 FIFA World Cup.[18][19] The album was promoted by the song "Arikitari na Onna", which was released as a digital download on October 1, 2014, a month before the album's release.[2] "Hashite wa Number" was also released digitally on October 22.[15]
Sheena made four television appearances to promote the album. The first was on October 24 on Music Station, where she performed "Arikitari na Onna". This was followed by a special edition of NHK's Songs, featuring performances of "Carnation", "Nippon" and "Hashire Wa Number" on November 8, a performance at Live Monster on November 9, and an appearance on Switch Interview Tatsujin-tachi on November 22, for which her song "Kodoku no Akatsuki" was acted as the theme song since its release in 2013.[20]
Sheena appeared in issues of the magazines Switch, Gekkan Skyper!, Skyper! TV Guide, Sōen and Rockin' On Japan to promote the album.[20] The issue of Switch featured an extended interview with Sheena, as well as comments by Hideki Noda and a text message conversation between Sheena and Hikaru Utada held in September 2014.[21]
Sheena toured the album in November and December 2014, with the Ringo Haku '14: Toshionna no Gyakushū concerts held in Saitama, Osaka and Fukuoka.[2]
A jazzy instrumental arrangement of "Chichinpuipui" was used as one of the backing tracks to the video presentation promoting the upcoming 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo during the closing ceremony of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[22]
Track listing
editAll lyrics by Ringo Sheena except "Kodoku no Akatsuki (Nobu Neko-ban)" by Aya Watanabe; all music by Sheena except "Ariamaru Tomi" by Sheena and Tomotaka Imamichi.
No. | Title | Arranger(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Shizuka Naru Gyakushū" (静かなる逆襲, "Quiet Counterattack") |
| 4:03 |
2. | "Jiyū e Michizure" (自由へ道連れ, "Traveling Companion to Freedom") | Sheena | 3:33 |
3. | "Hashire Wa Number" (走れゎナンバー, "Go, Rental Car") | Sheena | 4:16 |
4. | "Sekidō o Koetara" (赤道を越えたら, "Crossing the Equator") |
| 3:33 |
5. | "JL005-bin de" (JL005便で, "On Flight JL005") |
| 4:17 |
6. | "Chichinpuipui" (ちちんぷいぷい, "Abracadabra") | Murata | 3:14 |
7. | "Ima" (今, "Present") |
| 4:14 |
8. | "Irohanihoheto" (いろはにほへと) |
| 3:19 |
9. | "Arikitari na Onna" (ありきたりな女, "An Ordinary Woman") | Sheena | 4:09 |
10. | "Carnation" (カーネーション) | Saito | 3:00 |
11. | "Kodoku no Akatsuki (Nobu Neko-ban)" (孤独のあかつき(信猫版), "The Solitude of Dawn (Nobu-Neko Version)") |
| 2:49 |
12. | "Nippon" |
| 3:54 |
13. | "Ariamaru Tomi" (ありあまる富, "Excessive Wealth") | Imamichi | 5:41 |
Total length: | 50:05 |
No. | Title | Director | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Arikitari na Onna" | Yuichi Kodama | 4:30 |
2. | "Irohanihoheto" | Kodama | 3:28 |
3. | "Carnation" | Kodama | 3:13 |
4. | "Nippon" | Kodama | 4:11 |
5. | "Jiyū e Michizure" | Yasuyuki Ozeki | 3:35 |
6. | "Ariamaru Tomi" | Kodama | 5:52 |
Personnel
editPersonnel details were sourced from Hi Izuru Tokoro's liner notes booklet.[16]
Performers and musicians
- Masato Abe – cello (#7-8, #11-12)
- Goldman Akita (Soil & "Pimp" Sessions) – bass guitar (#7)
- Toshiki Akiyama – viola (#10)
- Toshiyuki Akiyama – viola (#5)
- Akio Andō – contrabass (#10)
- Andy – chorus (#6)
- Kenta Arai – bass guitar (#13)
- Tomoyuki Asakawa – harp (#10-11)
- Kazuki Chiba – contrabass (#7)
- Christophe – chorus (#6)
- Duke – chorus (#6)
- Great Eida – 1st violin (#1)
- Midori Eida – violin (#7, #10)
- Motoko Fujiie – violin (#5)
- Masayoshi Fujimura – violin (#5)
- Otohiko Fujita – horn (#10)
- Keita Fukui – violin (#5)
- Osamu Fukui – fagotto (#10)
- Hirohito Furugawara – viola (#5-6, #8, #11-12)
- Yoshiki Hakoyama – trombone (#6)
- Takashi Hamano – violin (#7)
- Toshiki Hata – drums (#10)
- Hayashi (from Polysics) – guitars (#2)
- Masaki Hayashi – piano (#4), rhodes piano (#5)
- Masayuki Hiizumi – clavinet (#3)
- Hikari – chorus (#6)
- Yuki Horie – cello (#7)
- Aiko Hosokawa – viola (#10, #12)
- Ayako Igarashi – violin (#10)
- Tsutomu Ikeshiro – trombone (#6)
- Tomotaka Imamichi – guitars (#13)
- Shigeki Ippon – contrabass (#5, #8, #11)
- Akane Irie – violin (#5-6, #8, #11-12)
- Satoshi Ishihara (from Going Under Ground) – bass guitar (#2)
- Masahiro Itadaki – violin (#7, #10, #12)
- Shuhei Ito – cello (#1)
- Tomoki Iwanaga – cello (#5)
- Ichiyo Izawa – harpsichord (#8), piano (#10)
- Jōsei (Soil & "Pimp" Sessions) – piano (#7)
- Yuri Kaji – viola (#7-8, #11)
- Seiji Kameda – bass (#10)
- Ayano Kasahara – cello (#6-8, #11-12)
- Tsukasa Kasuya – violin (#7-8, #11)
- Akiko Kato – violin (#5)
- Noriyasu "Kāsuke" Kawamura – drums (#8, #12-13)
- Takaya Kimura – cello (#5)
- Chieko Kinbara – violin (#6)
- Nagisa Kiriyama – violin (#5-8, #10-12)
- Junko Kitayama – horn (#10)
- Takashi Konno – contrabass (#8, #11-12)
- Rieko Kōno – viola (#7)
- Ayumu Koshikawa – violin (#6-8, #10-12)
- Minoru Kuwata – viola (#5, #7), violin (#6, #8, #11-12)
- Ivan Lins – voice (#4)
- Yoshihiko Maeda – cello (#6-8, #10-12)
- Erika Makioka – cello (#8, #10-12)
- Koji Makuchi – contrabass (#5)
- Naoshi Masutani – viola (#5)
- Akiko Maruyama – violin (#6-7, #12)
- Yasuo Maruyama – cello (#5)
- Mataro – Latin percussion (#3, #6)
- Yuri Matsumoto – viola (#10)
- Yōhei Matsuoka – cello (#5)
- Meilani – chorus (#6)
- Midorin (Soil & "Pimp" Sessions) – drums (#4-5, #7)
- Kioko Miki – violin (#7-8, #10-12)
- Shōko Miki – viola (#7-8, #10-11)
- Eric Miyashiro – drums (#6)
- Kaori Morita – cello (#5)
- Makoto Motoi – viola (#5)
- Motoharu (Soil & "Pimp" Sessions) – alto saxophone (#7)
- Mariko Muranaka – cello (#7-8, #10-11)
- Yukinori Murata – violin (#7, #12)
- Yasuko Murata – viola (#5)
- Youichi Murata – trombone (#1, #4, #6)
- Hiroki Muto – violin (#5)
- Mayo Nagao – violin (#10, #12)
- Yukio Nagoshi – guitar (#1, #3-5, #8-9, #12), electric sitar (#8)
- Tetsujin Nakanishi – cello (#5)
- Yasuharu Nakanishi – piano (#6)
- Yuki Nanjo – violin (#8, #10-11)
- Kōji Nishimura – trumpet (#1, #4)
- Tatsuo Ogura – violin (#6-8, #10-12)
- Ken Okabe – violin (#5)
- Machi Okabe – violin (#5)
- Kuniko Okada – violin (#10)
- Naoko Okisawa – cello (#7, #12)
- Sho Okumura – trumpet (#6)
- Yuji Onishi – contrabass (#5)
- Sachie Onuma – viola (#7-8, #11)
- Takayuki Oshikane – violin (#8, #10-11)
- Ray – chorus (#6)
- Jun Saitō – contrabass (#7, #10, #12)
- Neko Saito – solo violin (#11)
- Teruhiko Saitō – contrabass (#7-8, #10-12)
- Makoto Sakurai (from Dragon Ash) – drums (#2)
- Yoshiaki Sato<!-佐藤芳明--> – accordion (#5), piano (#9)
- Shachō (Soil & "Pimp" Sessions) – agitator (#7)
- Ringo Sheena – guitar (#12), vocals
- Kimie Shigematsu – clarinet (#10)
- Yumi Shimazu – cello (#10)
- Yuhki Shinozaki – cello (#10)
- Kon Shirasu – violin (#10, #12)
- Satoshi Shōji – oboe (#10)
- Spike – chorus (#6)
- Masahiko Sugasaka – trumpet (#1, #4, #6)
- Yu Sugino – violin (#5)
- Suginami Junior Chorus – chorus (#13)
- Yuki Sugiyama – violin (#5)
- Ruka Suzuki – viola (#10)
- Tabu Zombie (Soil & "Pimp" Sessions) – trumpet (#7)
- Midori Takada – percussion (#6, #8)
- Kaori Takahashi – violin (#10)
- Hideyo Takakuwa – flute (#6, #10)
- Kenji Takamizu – bass guitar (#6)
- Mayu Takashima – viola (#6, #12)
- Koji Takeda – violin (#5)
- Masakuni Takeno – tenor saxophone (#6)
- Kojiro Takizawa – violin (#7-8, #10-12)
- Tom Tamada – drums (#1, #3, #9)
- Kazuhiro Tanabe – contrabass (#12)
- Shinji Tanaka – contrabass (#7)
- Takashi Taninaka – contrabass (#8, #10-11)
- Ai Tashiro – violin (#5)
- Thomas – chorus (#6)
- Manami Tokutaka – viola (#12)
- Seigen Tokuzawa – cello (#8, #11)
- Kayoko Tomi – contrabass (#5)
- Mao Tomonoh – cello (#10)
- Keisuke Torigoe – bass guitar (#4-5)
- Katsuhiko Toyama – viola (#10)
- Chizuko Tsunoda – violin (#7-8, #10-12)
- Shinichi Ubukata – guitar (#12)
- Ukigumo – guitar (#10)
- Leina Ushiyama – violin (#8, #11)
- Amiko Watabe – viola (#7-8, #11-12)
- Hitoshi Watanabe – bass guitar (#8, #12)
- Yūji Yamada – viola (#6, #8, #11-12)
- Hiroo Yamaguchi – bass guitar (#1, #3, #9)
- Daisuke Yamamoto – violin (#6-8, #11)
- Hideo Yamamoto – drums (#6)
- Takuo Yamamoto – baritone sax (#1, #4, #6), flute (#3)
- Michiyo Yamanari – violin (#5)
- Haruko Yano – violin (#6-8, #11-12)
- Aya Yokomizo – violin (#5)
- Tomoko Yokota – violin (#7-8, #11-12)
- Osamu Yoshida – alto saxophone (#6)
Visuals and imagery
- Central67 – design
- Chikako Aoki – styling
- Shinji Konishi – hair, make-up
- Shoji Uchida – photography
Technical and production
- Satoshi Akai – assistant engineer
- Robbie Clark – English translator
- Great Eida – concertmaster (#6, #8, #10-12)
- Ryota Gomi – assistant engineer
- Kohei Hatakeyama – assistant engineer
- Tomotaka Imamichi – arrangement (#13), additional composition (#13)
- Kiyoshi Itabashi – assistant engineer
- Takushi Iwata – assistant engineer
- Ryo Kanai – assistant engineer
- Takashi Kato – concertmaster (#5)
- Shohei Kojima – assistant engineer
- Shinya Kondo – assistant engineer
- Kōzō Miyamoto – assistant engineer
- Shigeo Miyamoto – mastering engineer
- Fumio Miyata – music coordinator
- Youichi Murata – woodwind arrangement (#1, #4), arrangement (#6)
- Nobuhiko Nakayama – programming (#5, #11-12)
- Atsushi Ōta – assistant engineer
- Neko Saito – arrangement (#10), conductor (#5, #7, #10-12), percussion arrangement (#8), string arrangement (#5, #7-8, #11-12)
- Takashi Saito – assistant engineer
- Shigeo Sakurai – assistant engineer
- Ringo Sheena – arrangement (#1-5, #7-9, #11-12), MIDI (#11), programming (#5), songwriting
- Ryu Takahashi – English translator
- Yuji Tanaka – assistant engineer
- Uni Inoue – recording engineer, mixing engineer
- Jun Watanabe – assistant engineer
Charts
editChart (2014) | Peak position |
---|---|
Japan Oricon daily albums[23] | 2 |
Japan Oricon weekly albums[24] | 3 |
Japan Oricon monthly albums[25] | 7 |
Japan Oricon yearly albums[26] | 65 |
Sales and certifications
editChart | Amount |
---|---|
Oricon physical sales[24] | 100,000 |
RIAJ physical certification[27] | Gold (100,000+) |
Release history
editRegion | Date | Format | Distributing Label | Catalogue codes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Japan | November 5, 2014[2] | CD, CD/DVD, CD/Blu-ray, digital download | Universal Music Japan | TYCT-60053, TYCT-69069, TYCT-69070 |
Taiwan | November 7, 2014[28] | CD/DVD | Universal | 0652315 |
Japan | November 22, 2014[29] | Rental CD | Universal Music Japan | TYCT-60053 |
References
edit- ^ a b "Sunny / SHEENA RINGO". Kronekodow. Retrieved October 10, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e "椎名林檎、5年半ぶりオリジナルアルバム発売" [Ringo Sheena releases first live album in five years]. Natalie. September 19, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
- ^ チャンネルガイド-東京事変オフィシャルブック- [Channel Guide: Tokyo Jihen Official Book] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kronekodow. February 29, 2012. pp. 159–164. ISBN 978-4884182984.
- ^ 椎名林檎 『カーネーション』 オフィシャルインタビュー (in Japanese). EMI Music Japan. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011. Retrieved April 21, 2014.
- ^ 椎名林檎、中居主演ドラマに主題歌「自由へ道連れ」提供 (in Japanese). Natalie. 2012-04-07. Retrieved 2012-06-24.
- ^ "椎名林檎「浮き名」「蜜月抄」特集" [Ringo Sheena special feature: Ukina and Mitsugetsu-shō]. Natalie. November 13, 2013. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
- ^ a b c d Masaki Uchida (October 22, 2014). "LINER NOTES 『日出処』" (in Japanese). Kronekodow. Archived from the original on October 24, 2014. Retrieved October 24, 2014.
- ^ a b c Uchida, Masaki (October 20, 2014). "LONG INTERVIEW 音楽家の逆襲" [Long Interview: The Musician Strikes Back]. Switch (in Japanese). 32 (11). Tokyo: Switch Publishing: 36–41. ISBN 978-4884183622.
- ^ "自由へ道連れ / 椎名林檎" [Jiyū e Michizure / Ringo Sheena]. Kronekodow. 2012. Retrieved May 2, 2014.
- ^ a b Nippon (Media notes) (in Japanese). Ringo Sheena. Tokyo, Japan: EMI R. 2014.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ a b c Tōtaikai: Heisei Nijūgo-nendo Kamiyama-chō Taikai (Media notes) (in Japanese). Ringo Sheena. Tokyo, Japan: Universal Music Japan. 2014.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ Matsumura (May 27, 2014). "椎名林檎のライヴを観た!次号JAPANでインタヴュー‼︎" [I saw Ringo Sheena's concert! And I'll interview her in the next issue!] (in Japanese). Rockin' On. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ^ Hirokazu Koike (May 28, 2014). 椎名林檎@横浜 大さん橋ホール [Ringo Sheena & Yokohama Daisanbashi Hall] (in Japanese). Rockin' On. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ^ Sanmon Gossip (Media notes) (in Japanese). Ringo Sheena. Tokyo, Japan: EMI Music Japan. 2009.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ a b "椎名林檎、新曲「走れゎナンバー」配信スタート". MTV Japan. October 22, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
- ^ a b Hi Izuru Tokoro (Media notes) (in Japanese). Ringo Sheena. Tokyo, Japan: Universal Music Japan. 2015.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ Uchida, Masaki (October 20, 2014). "DOCUMENT: RECORDING / PHOTO SHOOTING / MOVIE SHOOTING / LIVE". Switch (in Japanese). 32 (11). Tokyo: Switch Publishing: 44–55. ISBN 978-4884183622.
- ^ "椎名林檎が14年ぶりにTOKYO FM渋谷スペイン坂スタジオに生登場!サッカーテーマの話題の新曲「NIPPON」制作秘話&長友選手にエール!". Music Lounge (in Japanese). Cansystem. June 16, 2014. Archived from the original on June 17, 2014. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
- ^ "2014NHKサッカーテーマとなるニューシングルを6月11日に発売決定!" [2014 NHK soccer theme song new single release on June 11!] (in Japanese). Universal. April 24, 2014. Archived from the original on June 4, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^ a b 椎名林檎 10月・11月メディア露出リスト (in Japanese). Kronekodow. October 22, 2014. Archived from the original on October 24, 2014. Retrieved October 24, 2014.
- ^ "「SWITCH」最新号に林檎&宇多田SMS対談" (in Japanese). Natalie. October 16, 2014. Retrieved October 24, 2014.
- ^ "デイリー CDアルバムランキング 2014年11月06日付" [Daily CD album rankings (2014.11.06)] (in Japanese). Oricon. November 7, 2014. Archived from the original on November 10, 2014. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
- ^ a b "オリコンランキング情報サービス「you大樹」" [Oricon Ranking Information Service 'You Big Tree']. Oricon. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
- ^ "月間 CDアルバムランキング 2014年11月度" [Monthly CD Album Ranking (November 2014)] (in Japanese). Oricon. 2014. Archived from the original on March 21, 2015. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
- ^ "年間 CDアルバムランキング 2014年度 61~70位" [Yearly CD Album Ranking 2014 (71-80)] (in Japanese). Oricon. 2014. Archived from the original on January 2, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2015.
- ^ "ゴールド等認定作品一覧 2014年11月" [Works Receiving Certifications List (Gold, etc) (November 2014)] (in Japanese). Recording Industry Association of Japan. December 10, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^ "椎名林檎 / 日出處 豪華初回盤 (CD+DVD)" (in Chinese). Books.com.tw. Retrieved November 5, 2014.
- ^ 日出処/椎名林檎 (in Japanese). Tsutaya. Retrieved September 22, 2014.