Rip Slyme discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 11 |
EPs | 2 |
Live albums | 1 |
Compilation albums | 4 |
Singles | 33 |
Video albums | 8 |
Remix albums | 1 |
The discography of Japanese musical act Rip Slyme consists of ten studio albums, four compilation albums, two extended plays, one live album, eight video albums and thirty-three singles. Rip Slyme debuted as an independent act on File Records in 1995, releasing material with them until their major label debut under Warner Music Japan in 2000. The band's second album under Warner, Tokyo Classic (2002) was a commercial success, selling over 1,000,000 copies.
Some of the band's most commercially successful songs include "Rakuen Baby" (2002) and "Nettaiya" (2007), summer-themed songs that have both been certified Platinum or higher by the Recording Industry Association of Japan.
Rip Slyme collaborated with the rock band Quruli twice in 2006, when they released the singles "Lovi" and "Juice" simultaneously. The group have worked together with guitarist Tomoyasu Hotei twice: once in 2006 on the single "Battle Funkastic" that mashed-up Rip Slyme's "Funkastic" with Hotei's "Battle Without Honor or Humanity" (2000), and in 2011 when Rip Slyme recorded a cover of Hotei's song "Bambina" for his collaborations album All Time Super Guest.
Title | Album details | Peak positions | Sales (JPN) [1] [A] | Certifications |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN [2] | ||||
Talkin' Cheap |
| — | ||
Five |
| 6 | 312,000 | |
Tokyo Classic |
| 1 | 955,000 |
|
Time to Go |
| 1 | 391,000 |
|
Masterpiece |
| 2 | 268,000 |
|
Epoch |
| 5 | 123,000 |
|
Funfair |
| 2 | 134,000 |
|
Journey |
| 4 | 83,000 |
|
Star |
| 7 | 34,000 | |
Golden Time |
| 7 | 30,000 | |
10 |
| 13 | 13,000 |
Title | Album details | Peak positions | Sales (JPN) [1] | Certifications |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN [2] | ||||
Yapparip: Ultime Early Years Collection 1995—2000 |
| 7 | 60,000 | |
Good Job! (グッジョブ!, Gujjobu!) |
| 1 | 546,000 |
|
Good Times |
| 2 | 191,000 |
|
Bad Times |
| 11 | 31,000 |
Title | Album details |
---|---|
Lip's Rhyme |
|
Digest 10 |
|
Title | Album details | Peak positions | Sales (JPN) [1] |
---|---|---|---|
JPN [2] | |||
Rip Slyme Orchestra+Plus |
| 11 | 39,000 |
Title | Album details | Peak positions | Sales (JPN) [1] |
---|---|---|---|
JPN [2] | |||
Live at Budokan 2002.07.25 |
| 13 | 30,000 |
Title | Album details | Peak positions | Sales (JPN) [1] |
---|---|---|---|
JPN [2] | |||
20th Anniversary Complete Single Box |
| 76 | 1,000 |
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Sales (JPN) [1] | Certifications | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oricon Singles Charts [2] | Billboard Japan Hot 100 [13] [B] | ||||||||||
"Hakujitsu" (白日, "Daylight") | 1996 | 48 [C] | — | 14,000 [C] | Talkin' Cheap | ||||||
"Mahiru ni Mita Yume" (真昼に見た夢, "Daytime Dream") | — | — | |||||||||
"Fade Away" | 1998 | — | — | ||||||||
"At the Lounge" | — | ||||||||||
"Tones" | — | — | |||||||||
"Kaze ni Fukarete" (風に吹かれて, "Blown in the Wind") | — | ||||||||||
"Underline No. 5" | 2000 | — | — | Non-album single | |||||||
"Mata Au Hi made" (マタ逢ウ日マデ, "Until the Day We Meet Again") | 95 | — | 2,000 | Five | |||||||
"Steppers Delight" (ステッパーズ・ディライト, Suteppāzu Diraito) | 2001 | 23 | — | 113,000 | |||||||
"Zatsunen Entertainment" (雑念エンタテインメント, "Idle Entertainment") | 8 | — | 80,000 | ||||||||
"One" | 4 | — | 325,000 | Tokyo Classic | |||||||
"Funkastic" | 2002 | 2 | — | 231,000 | |||||||
"Rakuen Baby" (楽園ベイべー, "Paradise Baby") | 2 | 81 [E] | 301,000 | ||||||||
"Blue Be-Bop" | 4 | — | 173,000 | Time to Go | |||||||
"Joint" | 2003 | 2 | — | 130,000 |
| ||||||
"Dandelion" | 2004 | 2 | — | 75,000 |
| Masterpiece | |||||
"Galaxy" | 5 | — | 100,000 |
| |||||||
"Tasogare Surround" (黄昏サラウンド, "Twilight Surround") | 5 | — | 77,000 |
| |||||||
"Hot Chocolate" | 2006 | 6 | 78 [F] | 87,000 |
| Epoch | |||||
"Hey, Brother" [G] | 11 | — | 20,000 | Non-album single | |||||||
"Luvi" (ラヴぃ) (Rip Slyme to Quruli) | 3 | — | 58,000 | Epoch | |||||||
"Blow" (ブロウ, Burō) | 6 | — | 50,000 | ||||||||
"I.N.G" [50] | 2007 | — | — | Funfair | |||||||
"Nettaiya" (熱帯夜, "Tropical Night") | 3 | — | 69,000 | ||||||||
"Speed King" | 12 | — | 21,000 |
| |||||||
"Taiyō to Bikini" (太陽とビキニ, "Sun and Bikini") | 2008 | 7 | 3 | 32,000 |
| Journey | |||||
"Stairs" | 2009 | 12 | 8 | 18,000 | |||||||
"Hoshi ni Negai o" (星に願いを, "Wish Upon a Star") [53] | — | 82 | Good Times | ||||||||
"Mata Au Hi made 2010 (Tomita-ryū)" (マタ逢ウ日マデ2010~冨田流~, "Tomita-style") | 2010 | 10 | 25 | 7,000 | |||||||
"Run with..." [54] | 2013 | — | 16 | Golden Time | |||||||
"Long Vacation" (ロングバケーション, Rongu Bakēshon) | 26 | 12 | 5,000 | ||||||||
"Jungle Fever" (ジャングルフィーバー, Janguru Fībā) | 26 | 11 | 4,000 | ||||||||
"Sly" | 33 | 3 | 4,000 | ||||||||
"Kono Michi o Yukō" (この道を行こう, "Let's Go Down this Path") | 2015 | 30 | 68 | 5,000 | 10 | ||||||
"Peace" (ピース, Pīsu) | 22 | ||||||||||
"Naisho de Onegai Shimasu" (ナイショデオネガイシマス, "Please Keep It a Secret") | — | Non-album single | |||||||||
"Popcorn Nancy" | 26 | 47 | 5,000 | 10 | |||||||
"Jump" (with Chay) | 49 | ||||||||||
"Itsu made mo" (いつまでも, "Forever") | — | ||||||||||
"Take It Easy" | 2016 | TBA | 88 | Non-album single | |||||||
"—" denotes items which were released before the creation of the Billboard Japan Hot 100, items that did not chart or items that were ineligible to chart because no physical edition was released. |
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Sales (JPN) [1] | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oricon Singles Charts [2] | Billboard Japan Hot 100 [13] [B] | ||||
"We Are the Wild" (among Gathering of the All-Stars) | 2000 | 32 | — | 30,000 | Non-album single |
"Battle Funkastic" (Hotei vs Rip Slyme) | 2006 | 8 | — | 68,000 | Soul Sessions |
"Juice" (Quruli to Rip Slyme) | 5 | — | 43,000 | Non-album single | |
"Wanna?" (Okamoto's vs Rip Slyme) | 2014 | — | 97 | VXV | |
"Feel" (among Unborde All Stars) | 2016 | — | 53 | Feel + Unborde Greatest Hits |
Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Certifications | Album | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Billboard Japan Hot 100 [13] [B] | RIAJ monthly ringtones [H] [I] | RIAJ Digital Track Chart [J] [K] | |||||||||
"Tales" [63] | 2007 | 79 | 45 | — |
| Funfair | |||||
"Remember" (featuring Mongol800) | 2008 | — | 73 | — | |||||||
"Supa Sonic" [64] | — | — | — | "Taiyō to Bikini" (single) | |||||||
"Splash" [65] | — | — | — | "Taiyō to Bikini" (single) / Journey | |||||||
"Love & Hate" [66] | 49 | 42 | — | "Stairs" (single) / Journey | |||||||
"Supreme" [67] | 19 | — | — | "Stairs" (single) | |||||||
"SpongeBob no Theme" (スポンジ・ボブのテーマ) [68] [L] | 2009 | — | — | 39 | Non-album single | ||||||
"Good Day" [69] | 10 | — | 41 | Journey | |||||||
"Journey" | 100 | — | — | ||||||||
"Rock 'n' Roll Radio" | — | — | 98 | ||||||||
"Good Times" | 2010 | 21 | — | 24 | Good Times | ||||||
"Scar" | 11 | — | 11 |
| |||||||
"Sense of Wonder" (センス・オブ・ワンダー, Sensu obu Wandā) [71] | 2011 | 5 | — | — | Star | ||||||
"Amai Seikatsu (La dolce vita)" (甘い生活~La dolce vita~, "The Sweet Life") | 28 | — | — | ||||||||
"Bambina (Bambino Mix)" (バンビーナ, Banbīna) [M] | 52 | — | — | All Time Super Guest | |||||||
"Jack Goes On" [N] | — | — | — | Star | |||||||
"Ride On" [O] | — | — | — | ||||||||
"Ah! Yeah!" | 2013 | — [P] | — | — | Golden Time | ||||||
"Metropolis" (メトロポリス, Metoroporisu) | 2015 | — [Q] | — | — | 10 | ||||||
"Baile Tokyo" | 2016 | — [R] | — | — | Non-album single | ||||||
"—" denotes items which were released in periods before or after the RIAJ ringtone or digital track charts existed, or items that did not manage to chart. |
Title | Album details | Peak positions | |
---|---|---|---|
JPN DVD [2] | JPN Blu-ray [2] | ||
Shortcuts! |
| 3 | — |
Rough-Cut Five |
| 4 | — |
Cut It Now! |
| 5 | — |
Rip Slyme Funfair Tour Final at Budokan |
| 7 | — |
Quick Cut |
| 7 | — |
Good Times DVD: The Complete Music Video Clips 2001-2011 |
| 5 | — |
Good Times DVD: The Best Live Performance 2002-2011 |
| 3 | — |
Dance Floor Massive IV Plus+ |
| 20 | 51 |
Japanese singer Ayumi Hamasaki has released eighteen studio albums, five compilation albums, twenty-six remix albums, four live albums and numerous singles and promotional singles. She debuted in 1995 under Nippon Columbia with the stage name Ayumi, releasing an extended play Nothing from Nothing, which was a collaboration with Dohzi-T and DJ Bass. Three years later, Hamasaki debuted again as a singer under Avex Trax with the single "Poker Face" (1998). Her first album A Song for ×× (1999) debuted at number one on Oricon's albums chart, and sold over 1.4 million copies.
The discography of Japanese-American R&B and pop singer Hikaru Utada consists of eleven studio albums, four compilation albums, eleven video albums and numerous singles and promotional singles. Utada began as a musician in the early 1990s as a member of U3, a family unit made up of her, her mother Junko Utada, also known as 1970s enka singer Keiko Fuji, and her father, musical producer Teruzane Utada. U3 released their debut album Star in 1993, with the hope to debut in America. In 1996, the group was rebranded as Cubic U, an R&B project focusing on Hikaru Utada, resulting in the English language album Precious in 1998 with record label Toshiba EMI.
The discography of Japanese recording artist Namie Amuro contains 12 studio albums, 7 compilation albums, 47 singles, 10 live albums, 14 video albums and 102 music videos. Amuro has also collaborated with Verbal of M-Flo and Ryōsuke Imai for her Suite Chic project.
The discography of Mika Nakashima includes 11 studio albums, 7 compilation albums, 45 singles and 20 video albums. These have all been released through Sony Music Entertainment Japan.
The solo discography of Japanese musician Yui consists of five studio albums, three compilation albums, twenty-one singles and five video albums. These were released on independent label Leaflet Records in 2004, followed by Sony Music Entertainment Japan sub-label Gr8! Records in 2005, Sony Records between 2005 and 2006, Sony sub-label Studioseven Recordings between 2007 and 2010, before returning to Gr8! Records in 2010.
The discography of Japanese-American musician Yuna Ito consists of three studio albums, one compilation album and nineteen singles. Her debut album, Heart, was released in 2007 after six singles, including one of the two theme songs for the film Nana, "Endless Story" (2005), which also featured Ito in her acting debut, as well as "Precious" (2006), the theme song of the film Limit of Love: Umizaru. Both of these songs were very commercially successful, becoming certified by the RIAJ.
The discography of Japanese contemporary R&B singer Crystal Kay consists of 12 studio albums, three extended plays, five compilation albums, four video albums and numerous single releases. Crystal Kay debuted as a singer at 13 years of age in 1999 under Epic Records Japan. Her third album Almost Seventeen (2002) saw a great leap in popularity for Crystal Kay, reaching number two on Oricon's albums chart. In 2005, Crystal Kay sang the eponymous theme song for the Tsuyoshi Kusanagi drama Koi ni Ochitara: Boku no Seikō no Himitsu. "Koi ni Ochitara" became Crystal Kay's most successful single, being certified for a million ringtone downloads.
The discography of Ayaka consists of six studio albums, two compilation albums, a cover album and numerous singles, released through Warner between 2006 and 2009, and through Ayaka's independent label, A Station, from 2012 onwards.
The discography of Japanese pop and electronic dance group Perfume consists of seven studio albums, three compilation albums, twenty-eight singles and six video albums. Forming in 2001, the group debuted as local Hiroshima idols, releasing two singles through the independent Momiji Label. In 2003, the members moved to Tokyo to further their career as idols. Signing with independent label Bee-Hive Records, the group met electronic producer Yasutaka Nakata of the band Capsule, who began to produce their music from 2003 onward.
The discography of Japanese R&B and pop singer Ken Hirai consists of ten studio albums, two compilation albums, one remix album, three cover albums, thirteen video albums and numerous singles and promotional singles. Hirai debuted as a musician under Sony Music Records in 1995 with the single "Precious Junk", but found success five years later with the single "Lakuen" and his third album, The Changing Same.
The discography of Japanese musician Kaela Kimura consists of eleven studio albums, two compilation albums, one cover album, four extended plays, thirty-one singles and five video albums. She debuted as a musician in 2004 under the label Columbia Music Entertainment, releasing ten albums with the company. In 2013, Kimura released Rock, an album of English language covers under her private label Ela Music. In 2014, Kimura released "Ole! Oh!", her first single under Victor Entertainment.
The discography of Japanese recording artist and actor Masaharu Fukuyama consists of ten studio albums, four compilation albums, three remix albums, twenty video albums, and numerous physical and promotional singles. Fukuyama debuted through BMG Japan by releasing the single "Tsuioku no Ame no Naka" (1990) and the album Dengon. The works failed to chart, however, in 1992 the single "Good Night", aided by the popularity it gained through use in the drama Ai wa Dō da, charted on the Oricon Singles Chart, peaking at number nine. In 1993, his album Calling became his first number one album on the Oricon Albums Chart; it has sold over 850,000 copies in Japan and has been certified two-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ).
The discography of M-Flo features nine studio albums, nine compilation albums, one live album and 25 singles. These were released on Labsoul Records and Avex Group independent label Rhythm Republic in 1998, and from 1999 onwards released through Rhythm Zone.
The discography of Tokyo Jihen consists of five studio albums, three compilation albums, one regular release extended play, three vinyl exclusive extended plays, and 13 video releases, released through Toshiba EMI, EMI Music Japan and Universal between 2004 and 2013.
The discography of Japanese pop duo Dreams Come True consists of 20 studio albums, 6 compilation albums, 17 video albums, and numerous singles. The band was formed in 1988 by Miwa Yoshida, Masato Nakamura, and Takahiro Nishikawa as Cha-Cha & Audrey's Project, which was later changed to Dreams Come True. The first single "Anata ni Aitakute" did not chart, but their eponymous debut album sold over a million copies in Japan and was certified Million by the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ). The follow-up albums also performed well on the charts, with the 1989 release Love Goes On... lingering on the Oricon Albums Chart for four years. The group's fifth studio album The Swinging Star (1992) was at one point, the best-selling album in Japan, shifting over 3.7 million copies in the country.
The discography of Japanese pop singer Kana Nishino consists of seven studio albums, six compilation albums, one EP, thirty-four singles and ten video albums. Nishino debuted in 2008 under Sony Music Japan, and gained national recognition with the singles "Tōkutemo" and "Kimi ni Aitaku Naru Kara" (2009). Nishino has released some of the most digitally successful songs in Japan: "Motto..." (2009), "Dear..." (2009), "Best Friend" (2010), "Aitakute Aitakute" (2010), "If" (2010) and "Kimi tte" (2010), all of which were certified million by the RIAJ.
The discography of Japanese pop and jazz vocalist Juju consists of six studio albums, four tribute albums, two extended plays, two live albums, five video albums and numerous singles. Juju debuted as a singer in 2001, collaborating with artists such as DJ Masterkey, Spontania and worked on the soundtrack for the film Kyōki no Sakura.
The discography of Japanese-American musician Beni consists of eight studio albums, two compilation albums, six live albums and three cover albums and twenty-six singles. Beni debuted in 2003 as a member of the Pony Canyon idol group Bishōjo Club 21 under the name Beni Arashiro, and in 2004 made her solo debut with Avex Trax.
The discography of Japanese singer-songwriter Kazumasa Oda consists of ten studio albums, six compilation albums, two cover albums, three video albums, and thirty solo singles. Oda began his career as a performer of the folk-rock band Off Course. He began releasing solo material in 1985. His 1991 single "Oh! Yeah!" / "Love Story wa Totsuzen ni" topped the Oricon Singles Chart and was certified two-times million by the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ). When his 2016 compilation album Ano Hi Ano Toki topped the Oricon Albums Chart, Oda became the oldest artist in the country to achieve the accomplishment.
The discography of the Japanese pop group Sandaime J Soul Brothers consists of ten studio albums, two compilation albums, and twenty-six singles. Since the group's original formation in 1999, the group has experienced two line-up changes and reboots, and currently consists of seven members: Naoto Kataoka, Naoki Kobayashi, Ryuji Imaichi, Hiroomi Tosaka, Elly, Takanori Iwata, Kenjiro Yamashita. The group was formed by producer and former Exile member Hiroyuki Igarashi who founded the group's management agency LDH Japan.