Shiroi Honō

"Shiroi Honō
白い炎"

Cover of EP release of Shiroi Honō.

Cover of EP release of Shiroi Honō.
Single by Yuki Saito
from the album Axia
A-side Shiroi Honō (白い炎)
B-side Shabon-iro no Natsu (石鹸<シャボン>色の夏)
Released May 21, 1985 (1985-05-21)
Format 7-inch single
Genre J-pop
Length 8:27
Label Canyon
Yuki Saito singles chronology
Sotsugyō
(1985)
Shiroi Honō
(1985)
Hatsukoi
(1985)

Shiroi Honō (白い炎, lit. "White Blaze") is the second single from Japanese singer Yuki Saito. The single was released by Canyon Records on May 21, 1985, and was used as the theme song for the first Sukeban Deka television drama series on Fuji TV, in which Saito also played the main character, Saki Asamiya.

History

Shiroi Honō was released by Canyon Records on May 21, 1985. It was used as the theme song for the first Sukeban Deka television drama series on Fuji TV,[1] and Saito was the first to play the main character in the series, Saki Asamiya (she was followed by Yoko Minamino in the second series[2] and Yui Asaka in the third).[3] While Saito's first release, Sotsugyō is a pop song, Shiroi Honō is a rock song.

The title song was composed by Kōji Tamaki, and Shabon-iro no Natsu was composed by Toshio Kamei. Both songs had lyrics written by Yukinojō Mori, and both were arranged by Satoshi Takebe.[notes 1]

Chart history

Chart (1985) Release Peak
position
Oricon "Shiroi Honō/Shabon-iro no Natsu" 5
The Best Ten "Shiroi Honō/Shabon-iro no Natsu" 9

Track listing

EP (catalog #7A0488), CD single (catalog #S10A0032, released April 29, 1988)
No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
1."Shiroi Honō (白い炎)"  Yukinojō MoriKōji Tamaki (composer)
Satoshi Takebe (arranger)
4:12
2."Shabon-iro no Natsu (石鹸<シャボン>色の夏)"  Yukinojō MoriToshio Kamei (composer)
Satoshi Takebe (arranger)
4:15
Total length:8:27

Covers

The title sing was covered by Chiwa Saitō on the Rosario + Vampire Capu2 Character Song 2 single on October 29, 2008[4] and the Rosario + Vampire Idol Cover Best Album released on February 18, 2009.[5][6][7]

Notes

  1. These individuals are all listed on the album cover as well as the label on the vinyl EP itself.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.