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・ Ashish Sen
・ Ashish Sharma
・ Ashish Shelar
・ Ashish Singh
・ Ashish Suryawanshi
・ Ashish Thakkar
・ Ashish Tokas
・ Ashish Vidyarthi
・ Ashish Zaidi
・ Ashishma Nakarmi
・ Ashit River
・ Ashit Roy Chowdhury
・ Ashita Dhawan
・ Ashita e
・ Ashita e Kakeru Hashi
Ashita e no Sanka
・ Ashita ga Arusa
・ Ashita Ga Arusa (TV series)
・ Ashita no Joe
・ Ashita no Kioku/Crazy Moon (Kimi wa Muteki)
・ Ashita no Nadja
・ Ashita no Prism
・ Ashita wa Ashita no Kaze ga Fuku
・ Ashita, Haru ga Kitara
・ Ashita, Mama ga Inai
・ Ashitaba
・ Ashitey Trebi-Ollennu
・ Ashitha
・ Ashitha (writer)
・ Ashiya


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Ashita e no Sanka : ウィキペディア英語版
Ashita e no Sanka
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"Ashita e no Sanka" () is the debut Japanese-language single by Tibetan singer Alan. The song was produced by Kikuchi Kazuhito and written by Nojima Shinji, with arrangement by Nakano Yuuta. It was released on November 21, 2007, as the lead single from her debut studio album, ''Voice of Earth'' (2009). It was later released in Taiwan on June 20, 2008.
The single peaked at number sixty-nine on the ''Oricon'' charts, number twenty on the ''G-Music'' Jpop/Kpop charts〔(G-Music 風雲榜 (東洋榜) )〕 and number nine on the ''Five-Music'' Jpop/Kpop charts.〔(五大唱片 (日韓榜) )〕
An orchestral version of "Ashita e no Sanka" was included as a b-side on her sixth Japanese single "Red Cliff: Shin-Sen", while the Chinese version, titled "Mingri Zange" (明日讚歌), was included on her second Chinese album ''Xin De Dongfang''. A Chinese version of the b-side song "Sakura Modern", titled "San Sheng Shi San Sheng Lu" (三生石 三生路), was included on her Chinese single "Xin Zhan (Red Cliff)".
Marty Friedman covered "Ashita e no Sanka" on his instrumental album ''Tokyo Jukebox'' (2009).
==Track listing==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ashita e no Sanka」の詳細全文を読む



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