Eve | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | March 5, 2008 | |||
Recorded | 2006–2008 | |||
Genre | J-pop | |||
Label | King Records | |||
Showta chronology | ||||
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Singles from Eve | ||||
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Eve (stylized as EVE) is the debut[a] studio album of Showta. The album was released on March 5, 2008.
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 an insert 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 |