Real World (album)
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''Real World'' (stylised as REAL WORLD) is Kokia's 11th studio album, released on March 31, 2010. Kokia travelled to the
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for inspiration for songs on the album. Because of this, much of the promotional material is themed around her trip to Tunisia, including the album booklet and the music video for "The Woman."


Background

Before the album, three digital singles were released over eight months. Dubbed the Life Trilogy (Life Trilogy ~いのちの3部作~), the three singles featured message songs for humanity. was the first of these, released in August. "Kimi o Sagashite" asked the question "What is life, and why does it disappear/why does the end come?" in its lyrics. The second single was , released in December. "Single Mother" was an autobiographical story about the unreplaceable bonds Kokia has to her mother. The final, , was released in March two weeks before the album's Japanese release. The song has a message that people have the power to change sadness and loneliness with kindness. All three singles were billed as double A-sides, featuring four tracks and a
digital booklet Digital booklet is the digital equivalent of booklet attached to physical release that often accompany digital music purchases. They are most commonly distributed in PDF. One well-known distributor of digital booklets with digital purchases is the ...
each. Each single featured an original B-side not listed in the title, as well as a cover of a Western artist's song (
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" respectively). Only the first track from each EP features on the album. This album is Kokia's first since her second greatest hits collection, '' Coquillage: The Best Collection II''. "U-Cha-Cha" is a song Kokia originally performed live in concerts in 2002, at her first solo concert " That's Why I Was Born."


Conception

Kokia first planned to release an album in March 2010, however had no solid plans for a theme. However, after sharing a meal with a Japanese cameraman friend of hers when she visited
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for concerts (June 2009), he suggested she travel to Tunisia. She travelled to Tunisia in November 2009 for roughly a week and a half. Inspired by the scenery, Kokia chose the themes of life and death, the Earth and about womanhood. Eight of the 14 songs on the album were written about her experiences in Tunisia: "Birth," "Kodoku na Ikimono," "Kono Chikyū ga Marui Okage de," "Love Is Us, Love Is Earth," "Oto no Tabibito," "Real World," "Saishū Jōei" and "Watashi ga Mita Mono." The songs were inspired by many aspects of the trip, instead of solely from visiting the Sahara desert. "Birth" was inspired by a visit to the
Chott el Djerid Chott el Djerid ( ar, شط الجريد ') also spelled ''Sciott Gerid'' and ''Shott el Jerid'', is a chott, a large endorheic salt lake in southern Tunisia. The name can be translated from the Arabic into English as "Lagoon of the Land of Palms" ...
lake. Recording for the Tunisia-inspired songs from the album began in late December, after Kokia finished her Jū Ni Gatsu no Okurimono tour. However, not all of them had been written by this point. The album was fully completed in late February.


Promotion

The song "Road to Glory: For Dragon Nest" was used as the theme song for the
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. Tachibana from the Dragon Nest Japan management team, when posting news about the theme song, believed the song fitted well with the world outlook in the game, and felt moved by the song. A music video for the final track on the album, "The Woman," was created. It was based around footage of Kokia in the
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that was filmed while the photos for the CD jacket were being taken. The song was specifically written before her trip to Tunisia, as a central song that summed up she wanted the album to become. The music video is Kokia's first in four years, since 2006's "" The video was to be shown from a screen on the Twin21 building in the
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during album promotion, at five points during the day. In April, Kokia performed a tour in promotion for the album, Oto no Tabibito. It had four dates across Japan.


Reception

The album debuted at #14 on
Oricon , established in 1999, is the holding company at the head of a Japanese corporate group that supplies statistics and information on music and the music industry in Japan and Western music. It started as, which was founded by Sōkō Koike in Nov ...
's daily album chart, however quickly slipped to the lower end of the top 50 during the week of release. It debuted at #44 on the weekly charts, selling 3,100 copies. The album charted for a further two weeks at #161 and #241 respectively, selling a further 1,000 copies in this time. Critically, CDJournal described the album as "a work made with all her might, that records her feelings (on life, death, Tunisia, etc) just as they were, with real melodies."


Track listing

All songs written and produced by Kokia.


Japan Sales Rankings (subscription only)


Personnel

* Shigeo Fuchino - soprano
saxophone The saxophone (often referred to colloquially as the sax) is a type of single-reed woodwind instrument with a conical body, usually made of brass. As with all single-reed instruments, sound is produced when a reed on a mouthpiece vibrates to pr ...
* Kei Haneoka - arranger, programming (#12-13) * Yuya Haraguchi - acoustic guitar (#3), additional arrangement (#4), guitars (#4), * Shigeyuki Hirano - director (anco & co.) * Atsushi Kawahata -
electric piano An electric piano is a musical instrument which produces sounds when a performer presses the keys of a piano-style musical keyboard. Pressing keys causes mechanical hammers to strike metal strings, metal reeds or wire tines, leading to vibrations ...
(#4) * Hiroshi Kawasaki - mastering engineer (at Flair) * Mikio Koike - visual co-ordination (Victor) * Kokia - chorus arrangement, design, make-up, producer, songwriter, styling, vocals * Sae Konno - piano (#12) * Masahiro Kuniyoshi - download sales (Victor) * Masumi Ito - arrangement/programming (#2, #7, #11) * Syuichi Matsuura - publicist (Victor) * Tsuyoshi Miyagawa - drums (#6, #8) * Susumu Miyake -
cello The cello ( ; plural ''celli'' or ''cellos'') or violoncello ( ; ) is a Bow (music), bowed (sometimes pizzicato, plucked and occasionally col legno, hit) string instrument of the violin family. Its four strings are usually intonation (music), t ...
(#12) * Yutaka Nakamura - photographer * Kenji Nozaki - package sales (Victor) * Mio Okamura Quartet - strings (#1) * Hiroyasu Okasa -
quena The quena (hispanicized spelling of Quechua ''qina'', sometimes also written ''kena'' in English) is the traditional flute of the Andes. Traditionally made of cane or wood, it has 6 finger holes and one thumb hole, and is open on both ends or th ...
, siku (#3) * Aki Okiyama - visual co-ordination * Mitsutaka Saito - electric bass (#6),
washtub bass The washtub bass, or gutbucket, is a stringed instrument used in American folk music that uses a metal washtub as a resonator. Although it is possible for a washtub bass to have four or more strings and tuning pegs, traditional washtub basses hav ...
(#8-9) * Yoshikazu Sasahara - mixing engineer * Katsuhiko Sato - guitars (#3) * Shinozaki Strings - strings (#2, #7) * Jin Sukegawa - A&R (Victor) * Gen Tanabe - electric guitar (#5) * Koichiro Tashiro -
laúd Laúd ( es, "lute") is a plectrum-plucked chordophone from Spain, played also in diaspora countries such as Cuba and the Philippines. The laúd belongs to the cittern family of instruments. The Spanish and Cuban instruments have six double c ...
&
bandolin The bandolin is a 15-stringed musical instrument in Ecuador. It is used as a rhythm and melody instrument in the Andean region of Ecuador during festivals where dancing and music are involved. It has a flat back and 15 strings in triple course (m ...
(#11) * Tetsuro Toyama - acoustic guitar (#6), electric guitar (#14), guitars (#2, #8-9) * Kiyohide Ura - arrangement/keyboards (#1, #6, #8-10, #14), piano (#13) * Eri Yaguchi - design support * Yasuhisa Yamamoto - arrangement/backing track recording (#3-5), percussion (#3-5, #9), programming (#3, #5) * Kei Yasui - tin whistle (#11)


References

{{Authority control Kokia (singer) albums 2010 albums Victor Entertainment albums Japanese-language albums