Pop (Mao Abe album)

Pop (ポっぷ, Poppu) is Mao Abe's second album, released on January 27, 2010 (2010-01-27).[1] The album was released in two versions: a regular version and a limited edition CD+DVD version.

Pop
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 27, 2010 (2010-01-27)
Recorded2009
GenreJ-pop
Length53:58
LabelPony Canyon
Mao Abe chronology
Free
(2009)
Pop
(2010)
Alternative Cover
limited CD+DVD cover
Singles from Pop
  1. "Tsutaetai Koto/I Wanna See You"
    Released: May 27, 2009
  2. "Anata no Koibito ni Naritai no Desu"
    Released: August 5, 2009
  3. "Itsu no Hi mo"
    Released: January 13, 2010

Recording

The album consists of songs Abe wrote in her second and third years of high school. There are three exceptions: "Salaryman no Uta", "Itsu no Hi mo" and "15 no Kotoba" (15の言葉, 15 Words).[2] "15 no Kotoba" was written just after Abe's first album was released in early 2009, and "Itsu no Hi mo" in September.[3][4] Abe has not written any songs since then, blaming personal stress though finding live performance easy in this time, due to its passive nature and the lack of a need to quietly concentrate.[4]

Abe started creating the album in June 2008.[4] Unlike her first album, she made it without a specific theme or concept in mind.[3] Some songs Abe had made a conscious effort to leave until her second album, such as "Monroe" (モンロー) (which is influenced by the Yasutaka Nakata electro-pop sound of Perfume).[3] Abe found they clashed with the image she created of herself for the first album, instead wanting to focus on songs that would solidify her sound.[4]

Promotion

The album was preceded by three singles. "Tsutaetai Koto/I Wanna See You", Abe's first physically released single, featured tie-ups for both A-sides: "Tsutaetai Koto" was the music variety show Hey! Hey! Hey! Music Champ's ending theme song, while "I Wanna See You" was used in Calpis Water commercials. "I Wanna See You", along with her next single "Anata no Koibito ni Naritai no Desu", were originally released in 2008 on iTunes as acoustic demos. The third single, "Itsu no Hi mo", was used as the ending theme song for the Fuji TV documentary variety talk show Ethica no Kagami: Kokoro ni Kiku TV (エチカの鏡~ココロにキクTV~, Ethica's Mirror: TV that Listens to Your Heart).

"Mada" was used as a radio single to coincide with the album's release. It reached #23 on the Billboard Japan Hot 100.[5]

An album track, "15 no Kotoba", was used as the theme song to the film Hanbun no Tsuki ga Noboru Sora, starring Sosuke Ikematsu.

Track listing

CD track list

All songs written by Mao Abe.

No.TitleArranger(s)Length
1."Mada (未だ, Still)"Masakazu Andō, Yūichi Komori3:24
2."I Wanna See You"Andō3:35
3."Monroe (モンロー)"Komori3:11
4."Anata no Koibito ni Naritai no Desu (貴方の恋人になりたいのです, I Wanna Be Your Lover)"Andō5:08
5."Tsutaetai Koto (伝えたいこと, Thing I Wanna Tell You)"Komori4:12
6."Tsugō no Ii Onna no Uta (都合の良い女の唄, Lucky Girl Song)"Abe4:56
7."15 no Kotoba (15の言葉, 15 Words)"Komori4:07
8."Mō Hitotsu no My Baby (もうひとつのMY BABY, Another My Baby)"Abe5:10
9."Loving Darling"Andō3:02
10."Wakaru no (わかるの, I Get It)"Andō5:00
11."Poker Face (ポーカーフェイス)"Komori3:47
12."Itsu no Hi mo (いつの日も, Someday)"Komori5:19
13."Salaryman no Uta (サラリーマンの唄, Salaryman Song)"Abe3:02

DVD track list

No.TitleLength
1."Mao Abe Works 2008-2009" 
2."Mao Abe Live No. 0.7 Digest (2009/12/10 Shibuya Duo)" 

Singles[6]

Date Title Peak position Weeks Sales
May 27, 2009 (2009-05-27) "Tsutaetai Koto/I Wanna See You" 19 (Oricon) 10 13,290
August 5, 2009 (2009-08-05) "Anata no Koibito ni Naritai no Desu" 19 (Oricon) 5 8,768
January 13, 2010 (2010-01-13) "Itsu no Hi mo" 12 (Oricon) 5 9,216

Japan sales rankings[6]

Release Chart Peak position First week sales Sales total
January 27, 2010 (2010-01-27) Oricon Daily Albums Chart 3
Oricon Weekly Albums Chart 5 23,000 54,000

References

  1. "リリース|すけじゅーる|阿部真央オフィシャルサイト". Archived from the original on November 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-03.
  2. "クローズアップ『阿部真央(アベマオ)』|エキサイトミュージック(音楽)". Excite. 2010-01-20. Retrieved 2010-01-28.
  3. "阿部真央、デビューから1年を経た待望の2ndアルバム『ポっぷ』リリース特集 (2) / BARKS 特集". Barks. 2010-01-25. Retrieved 2010-01-28.
  4. Morihide, Yuki (もりひでゆき) (2010-01-06). ""ナタリー - [Power Push] 阿部真央"". Archived from the original on 2010-01-08. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
  5. "Japan Billboard Hot 100". Billboard. 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  6. "オリコンランキング情報サービス「you大樹」". Oricon. Retrieved 2010-01-28. (subscription only)
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