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Songs that relate to the manga Inuyasha, usually songs used in the animated series as opening theme songs, ending theme songs, or played during crucial scenes, or songs featured in either the Inuyasha films or games.
"Shinjitsu no Uta" (真実の詩) is the fourteenth single by Do As Infinity, released in 2002. [1] It was used as the fifth ending to the anime InuYasha. [2] [3] This song was included in the band's compilation album Do the A-side.
Kaoru Wada (和田 薫, Wada Kaoru, born May 5, 1962) is a Japanese composer and arranger. [1] He has composed the scores for many anime series, including Inuyasha, D.Gray-man, Saint Seiya: The Lost Canvas, Samurai 7 and, more recently, Tesla Note.
The song is used as the second ending theme for the anime Inuyasha. [2] The accompanying music video for "Fukai Mori" was filmed in early 2001 at the Glücks Königreich theme park in Hokkaido, Japan. [3] This song was included in the band's compilation albums Do the Best and Do the A-side. [4] [5] The song was later covered by Eir Aoi in her ...
The a-side song "One Day, One Dream" was used as the 5th opening theme song to the anime InuYasha. The b-side "Deep into Blue" was used as the House Commodity "Tongari Corn" commercial song. The other b-side "Arugamama" was TBS TV "Golden Muscle" ending theme song. Sample of the translated lyrics: (You can now, dream) Brandishing a brave dream
The claim: California counting ballots two weeks after Election Day is evidence it was ‘rigged’ A Nov. 19 Instagram post (direct link, archive link) claims one state’s lengthy vote-counting ...
Four pieces of theme music were used, one opening and three endings. "Kimi ga Inai Mirai" by Do As Infinity was the opening theme song for the series, used throughout the series. [13] "With You" by AAA was the first ending from episode one to nine. [13] The second ending was "Diamond" by Alan from episode ten to seventeen. [14]
Do As Infinity's fourteenth single, "Shinjitsu no Uta", was released in October, and sparked the beginning of a new project for the band. "Shinjitsu no Uta" was also chosen to be the fifth ending theme for Inuyasha. "Shinjitsu no Uta" became famous in China in July 2002 and was also translated into Mandarin. [2]