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Trip Trip

Trip Trip
Kokia Trip.jpg
Studio album by Kokia
Released January 9, 2002 (2002-01-09) (Asia)
January 23, 2002 (2002-01-23) (Japan)
Recorded 2001
Genre J-pop, folk
Length 1:03:37
Label Victor Entertainment
Producer Kokia
Kokia chronology
Songbird
(1999)
Trip Trip
(2002)
Remember Me
(2003)
Singles from Trip Trip
  1. "Tomoni"
    Released: May 23, 2001
  2. "Say Hi!!"
    Released: August 22, 2001
  3. "Tenshi"
    Released: November 21, 2001
  4. "Ningen tte Sonna Mono ne"
    Released: January 23, 2002
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
CDJournal (favourable)
JaME World (favourable)
MTV Taiwan 4/5 stars
Hiroshi Suzuki (favourable)

Trip Trip (stylised as trip trip) is Kokia's second album, released in January 2002. It was her first album released with Victor Entertainment, and her only released under Gai Records management (though Kokia worked with both companies for her collaborations with Ryuichi Kawamura on his ЯKS album, Kanata Made, in 2000). Unlike Songbird, the album was self-produced.

The opening track, "Chōwa Oto," was later re-arranged and used as the opening theme song for the animated film Origin: Spirits of the Past in 2006. It was released as the second A-side on the single "Ai no Melody/Chōwa Oto (With Reflection)" (愛のメロディー/調和 oto~with reflection~ Melody of Love/Harmony, Sound (With Reflection)?), and also features on her greatest hits album Pearl: The Best Collection in this re-arranged version. No other songs from the album featured due to licensing issues with Gai Records.

"A Gift" was used in European commercials for Subaru in 2002.

Four singles were released from the album: "Tomoni," "Say Hi!!," and "Tenshi" in 2001, and "Ningen tte Sonna Mono ne" in 2002 (simultaneously released with the album in Japan). None of these singles charted in Japan.

After Kokia's initial recognition in Hong Kong, some of these singles were released in the Chinese speaking world. "Say Hi!!" was released as a special five track release (featuring "Tomoni," its B-side, "Yes I Know" and an instrumental track as added songs), while "Tenshi" was released in a standard form. Both of the overseas releases were delayed after their initial Japanese release (Say Hi!! by three weeks, Tenshi by two). Kokia also performed at two high-profile concerts to coincide with these releases: the 13th anti-drug concert in Hong Kong on November the 17th to 30,000 people, and the annual Taiwanese New Year's concert to 120,000.


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Wikipedia

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