翻訳と辞書
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・ The Voice of the Cult
・ The Voice of the Eagle
・ The Voice of the Guns
・ The Voice of the Moon
・ The Voice of the Negro
・ The Voice of the Night
・ The Voice of the North
・ The Voice of the People
・ The Voice of the Performing Arts
・ The Voice (Bulgaria)
・ The Voice (CHOP)
・ The Voice (Eimear Quinn song)
・ The Voice (EP)
・ The Voice (Hong Kong)
・ The Voice (Indian TV series)
The Voice (Kokia album)
・ The Voice (Mavis Staples album)
・ The Voice (Mike Jones album)
・ The Voice (newspaper)
・ The Voice (North Devon)
・ The Voice (poetry collection)
・ The Voice (radio station)
・ The Voice (Russell Watson album)
・ The Voice (Seinfeld)
・ The Voice (The Moody Blues song)
・ The Voice (TV series)
・ The Voice (U.S. season 1)
・ The Voice (U.S. season 2)
・ The Voice (U.S. season 3)
・ The Voice (U.S. season 4)


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The Voice (Kokia album) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Voice (Kokia album)

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''The Voice'' (stylised as The VOICE) is Kokia's sixth studio album, released in February 2008. It is the first of four album releases in 2008 celebrating her 10th anniversary as a singer.
Three songs from the album feature on Kokia's 2009 greatest hits collection ''Coquillage: The Best Collection II'': "Ave Maria," "Chiisa na Uta" and "Everlasting." Also featured are "Say Goodbye and Good Day," the bonus track from the French edition, along with the ''Fairy Dance: Kokia Meets Ireland'' rearrangement of "Song of Pocchong."〔
In late 2009, "Lacrima" was chosen to be used as the ending theme song for the film Uyghur Kara Kita Shōnen.
==Background==

In response to the 2007 Chūetsu offshore earthquake, Kokia wrote a charity song, "Watashi ni Dekiru Koto," after being contacted by one of her fans who lived in Kashiwazaki, Niigata. The fan sent copies of the song to the local FM station FM Pikkara, who put the song on heavy rotation. A month after the earthquake, Kokia performed at a special encouragement concert to 3,000 residents in Kashiwazaki, along with the Japan Self-Defense Forces' band. When Kokia returned from this concert, she wrote the lullaby "Lacrima," which also features on the album. Two months after the earthquake, the song was released as a CD locally, due to popular demand (featuring both "Watashi ni Dekiru Koto" and "Lacrima").〔 Both songs later feature on the album, though "Watashi ni Dekiru Koto" as a Japan-only bonus track.〔 "Watashi ni Dekiru Koto" was later featured in a segment on the popular show Daremo Shiranai Nakeru Uta on the 9th of December, 2008.
In November 2007, Kokia released "Follow the Nightingale," which was used as the opening theme song for the game Tales of Innocence.〔 It was a commercial success, reaching #33 selling 12,000 copies (her fourth most sold single, as of 2010).〔 The single's B-side, "Say Goodbye & Good Day" was used as the ending theme song for the game. It features on the French edition of The Voice as a bonus track.
Kokia also released a single (the anime Gunslinger Girl: Il Teatrino's opening theme song) in January 2008 to commercial success (it sold over 10,000 copies),〔 however the single was released through anime retailer label Marvelous Entertainment, instead of Kokia's regular retailer Victor Entertainment. Neither the leading track or its B-side feature on the album.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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