Real Thing Shakes: Difference between revisions

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The release offered other firsts for B'z, with the cover being the first in which the band members were not pictured and also became the only B'z song to date not produced by [[Tak Matsumoto]] himself. Production duties instead went to famed Led Zeppelin producer Andy Johns. This served as only one of many occasions in which B'z has collaborated with Western engineers and musicians.
The release offered other firsts for B'z, with the cover being the first in which the band members were not pictured and also became the only B'z song to date not produced by [[Tak Matsumoto]] himself. Production duties instead went to famed Led Zeppelin producer Andy Johns. This served as only one of many occasions in which B'z has collaborated with Western engineers and musicians.
"Real Thing Shakes" was released in North America on a compilation Daisuke Matsuzaka.


At the time of recording, English renditions of "[[LOVE PHANTOM|FUSHIDARA 100%]]" and "[[The 7th Blues|WILD ROAD]]" were also produced, but were scrapped by the band for not being up to their expected standard.
At the time of recording, English renditions of "[[LOVE PHANTOM|FUSHIDARA 100%]]" and "[[The 7th Blues|WILD ROAD]]" were also produced, but were scrapped by the band for not being up to their expected standard.


== Track listing ==
== Track listing ==
[[Image:Gfibpromo2.jpg|thumb|right|240px|X]]
[[Image:rtsnamba.png|thumb|right|240px|X]]
# '''[[Real Thing Shakes (Lyrics)|Real Thing Shakes]]'''
# '''[[Real Thing Shakes (Lyrics)|Real Thing Shakes]]'''
#: Voted to 10th place by fans. Originally released as a [[Real Thing Shakes|single]] in 1996, the song is the only B'z single in their catalogue to be entirely in English and is also their only one-track single after Tak deemed one song as enough due to the power of the track. This marked the first and last time that the song would be included on a Japanese-released B'z album. The song was first performed live as the opening to [[B'z LIVE-GYM '96 "Spirit LOOSE"]], with a performance from the tour having been released on ''[[B'z LIVE-GYM Hidden Pleasure ~Typhoon No.20~]]''. The English song proved extremely popular with fans—enough so to be included in a number of live setlists to follow, in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2006.
#: Voted to 10th place by fans. Originally released as a [[Real Thing Shakes|single]] in 1996, the song is the only B'z single in their catalogue to be entirely in English and is also their only one-track single after Tak deemed one song as enough due to the power of the track. This marked the first and last time that the song would be included on a Japanese-released B'z album. The song was first performed live as the opening to [[B'z LIVE-GYM '96 "Spirit LOOSE"]], with a performance from the tour having been released on ''[[B'z LIVE-GYM Hidden Pleasure ~Typhoon No.20~]]''. The English song proved extremely popular with fans—enough so to be included in a number of live setlists to follow, in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2006.

Revision as of 17:00, 5 January 2013

Real Thing Shakes
Single by B'z
Released May 15, 1996
Promotions #1 ("Oretachi ni Ki wo Tsukero" TV Drama Theme)
Length 4:12
Label Vermillion Records
Producer Andy Johns
B'z singles chronology
"Mienai Chikara ~INVISIBLE ONE~/MOVE"
(1996)
"Real Thing Shakes"
(1996)
"FIREBALL"
(1997)

Real Thing Shakes is the twentieth single by B'z, released on May 15, 1996. The single is notable for many reasons, the chief of which being that it remains the only English single B'z has released and is also the band's only one-track single. Upon release, the single was a massive success for the band with sales in excess of 600,000 copies in its first week on shelves. Additionally, the release also set a record for being the first English single by a Japanese artist to sell one million copies and, in doing so, secured the record for thirteen consecutive one-million selling releases. As of 2012, the record remains unbroken.

The release offered other firsts for B'z, with the cover being the first in which the band members were not pictured and also became the only B'z song to date not produced by Tak Matsumoto himself. Production duties instead went to famed Led Zeppelin producer Andy Johns. This served as only one of many occasions in which B'z has collaborated with Western engineers and musicians.

"Real Thing Shakes" was released in North America on a compilation Daisuke Matsuzaka.

At the time of recording, English renditions of "FUSHIDARA 100%" and "WILD ROAD" were also produced, but were scrapped by the band for not being up to their expected standard.

Track listing

  1. Real Thing Shakes
    Voted to 10th place by fans. Originally released as a single in 1996, the song is the only B'z single in their catalogue to be entirely in English and is also their only one-track single after Tak deemed one song as enough due to the power of the track. This marked the first and last time that the song would be included on a Japanese-released B'z album. The song was first performed live as the opening to B'z LIVE-GYM '96 "Spirit LOOSE", with a performance from the tour having been released on B'z LIVE-GYM Hidden Pleasure ~Typhoon No.20~. The English song proved extremely popular with fans—enough so to be included in a number of live setlists to follow, in 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2006.

Personnel

B'z

Drums

  • Gregg Bissonette

Bass

  • Tony Franklin

Keyboards

  • Joseph Michael Szeibert