Swallowtail Butterfly (Ai no Uta)

"Swallowtail Butterfly (Ai no Uta)"
Single by Yen Town Band (Chara)
from the album Montage
B-side Mama's Alright
Released July 22, 1996 (1996-07-22)
Format CD Single
Genre J-pop
Length 4:49
Label Sony Music Japan
Writer(s) Chara, Shunji Iwai, Takeshi Kobayashi, Takayo Nagasawa, Bryan Burton-Lewis
Producer(s) Takeshi Kobayashi
Yen Town Band (Chara) singles chronology
"Tiny Tiny Tiny"
(1995)
"Swallowtail Butterfly
(Ai no Uta)
"
(1996)
"Chara no Boogie Shoes" with The 99 1/2
(1996)

"Swallowtail Butterfly (Ai no Uta)" (あいのうた Suwarōteiru Batafurai Ai no Uta, "Love Song") is a song by Chara, released under the name Yen Town Band.[1] It was the lead single from Montage, a concept album released for the Shunji Iwai film Swallowtail Butterfly that also starred Chara. This song was used as the theme song for the film.

The single debuted at #31 on Oricon's singles charts. Two months later, after the release of the film and album, the single managed to reach #1.[2]

The song was written by Takeshi Kobayashi, in collaboration with Chara and film director Shunji Iwai.

Music video

Chara in the music video.

The music video begins with a long panning shot over a cityscape. It then shows Chara against a farm windmill. It then switches to a junkyard, where Chara and several other people are filtering through rubbish. They eventually find a working piano, which they bring back on the back of a pickup truck. Chara plays the piano as the car drives off. This scene is intersperces with scenes from the movie.

Track listing

Single
No. TitleLyricsMusicArranger Length
1. "Swallowtail Butterfly (Ai no Uta)"  Shunji Iwai, Takeshi Kobayashi, CharaTakeshi KobayashiTakeshi Kobayashi 4:49
2. "Mama's Alright"  Takeshi Kobayashi, Takayo Nagasawa, Bryan Burton-LewisTakeshi KobayashiTakeshi Kobayashi 4:11

Chart rankings

Charts (1996) Peak
position
Oricon weekly singles[3] 1
Oricon yearly singles[4] 26
Charts (2010) Peak
position
RIAJ Digital Track Chart Top 100[5] 40
RIAJ Digital Track Chart Top 100[6] 45

Reported sales

Chart Amount
Oricon physical sales[4] 878,000

Chart procession and succession

Preceded by
"Take Me Higher" by V6
Japanese Oricon Chart number one single
October 7, 1996
Succeeded by
"Save Your Dream" by Tomomi Kahala

Cover versions

References

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