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Bleach (ブリーチ, Burīchi) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tite Kubo. Bleach follows the adventures of high school student Ichigo Kurosaki after he obtains the powers of a Soul Reaper ( 死神 , Shinigami , literally, " Death God ") from another Soul Reaper, Rukia Kuchiki .
Songs that relate to the manga Bleach, usually songs used in the animated series as opening theme songs, ending theme songs, or played during crucial scenes, or songs featured in Bleach films or games.
In May, it was announced that SID's new single "Ranbu no Melody" would be chosen as opening theme of Bleach. [3] The song started airing in the anime episodes on October 12. [4] Before being officially released on CD, the song debuted on DAM karaoke with a freebie for those who downloaded it. Three editions were released on December 1, 2010 ...
The single D-tecnoLife was used as second opening of anime series Bleach, and it was aired on TV Tokyo from July 6, 2005 to October 23, 2005. D-tecnoLife was also used on video games titles Bleach: Erabarashi Tamashii for PlayStation 2 , GameCube and both Wii games, Bleach: GC Tasogare ni Mamieru Shinigami , Bleach: Shattered Blade and Bleach ...
The song was used as the 12th opening theme song for the Bleach anime, starting in April 2010 and succeeded by "Ranbu no Melody" by SID on October 12, 2010. [4]On August 21, performed the song live on the Fuji TV music show Music Fair, and also collaborated with Ryoko Moriyama and Akiko Yano to perform covers of "Kono Hiroi Nohara Ippai" (Moriyama's debut single in 1967) and "Super Folk Song ...
It was released in three versions: two limited editions containing different b-sides, and a regular edition. The title track was used as the fifteenth and final opening theme for the anime Bleach. [1] The single reached #6 on the Oricon weekly chart and charted for six weeks, selling 33,095 copies. [1]
The band made their debut with the single "D-tecnolife", which was the second opening theme for the anime Bleach. [5] The single made its debut in the Oricon charts at the fourth spot with 32,000 copies together with Mr. Children's twenty-seventh single, "Yonjigen Four Dimensions" (四次元 Four Dimensions) on the top spot. [6]
The band's next single, "Asterisk", was used as the first opening theme to the anime Bleach and went straight to No. 1 on the charts and was able to stay in the top 20 for 22 weeks. Because it was released in late 2005, it was counted as a 2005 album; often album sales for albums released late in the year are counted for next year's charts.