"Take Off"
File:TakeOff-Regular.jpeg
Single by 2PM
from the album Republic of 2PM
B-side Heartbeat (Japanese Version)
Released May 18, 2011 (2011-05-18) (Japan)
Format CD single, digital download
Recorded 2011
Genre J-pop, dance-pop, pop
Length 03:23
Label Ariola Japan
Writer(s) J.Y. Park "The Asiansoul"
Super Changddai
Akihito Tanaka
2PM singles chronology
"Don't Stop Can't Stop"
(2010)
"Take Off"
(2011)
"I'm Your Man"
(2011)

"Take Off" is the debut Japanese single by South Korean boy band, 2PM. This single was released on May 18, 2011 in 4 editions: CD+DVD, CD+Photobook, CD only limited and a Regular edition. The song was used as ending song theme for 12 episodes of the anime "Blue Exorcist". It peaked no. 4 in Oricon's Weekly singles chart with 59,059 sold in the first week.[1]

Contents

Composition [link]

The B-side is a Japanese version of their Korean song "Heartbeat", which is the lead single of their first Korean album 1:59PM.

Tracklisting [link]

CD+DVD and CD Only tracklist[2]
No. Title Lyrics Length
1. "Take Off"   Kenn Kato, KOMU 3:23
2. "Heartbeat" (Japanese version) J.Y. Park "The Asiansoul", Yu Shimoji, Shoko Fujibayashi, KOMU 3:16
3. "Take Off" (without main vocal)   3:24
4. "Heartbeat" (Japanese version) (without main vocal)   3:14
Total length:
13:17
CD Only Limited Pressing tracklist[2]
No. Title Length
3. "Take Off" (TV size ver.) 1:35
6. "Take Off" (TV size ver.) (without main vocal) 1:34
Total length:
16:26

Charts [link]

Oricon Chart Peak Debut Sales Sales Total Chart Run
Daily Singles Chart 3[1] 59,059 73,210 17 weeks
Weekly Singles Chart 4[1]
Monthly Singles Chart 11[1]
Yearly Singles Chart 104[1]

References [link]

  1. ^ a b c d e (Japanese) 2011 年06月第1週の邦楽シングルランキング情報 Retrieved June 23, 2011
  2. ^ a b c [1]. "2PM Japanese discography in Japanese official site. Retrieved June 23, 2011

External links [link]


https://wn.com/Take_Off_(2PM_song)

Take off

Takeoff is the aircraft flight phase in which a vehicle goes from the ground to flying in the air.

Takeoff, Take off or Take Off may also refer to:

Films

  • Takeoff (film), a 1979 Soviet drama film
  • Take Off (film), a 2009 South Korean film
  • Music

  • "Take Off" (Young Dro song), a 2009 song by Young Dro
  • "Take-off" (Vivid song), a 2010 song by Japanese band Vivid
  • "Take Off" (2PM song), a 2011 song by Korean boy group 2PM
  • "Take Off" (Chipmunk song), a 2011 single by British pop rapper Chipmunk
  • Take Off (EP), a 2013 EP by Japanese band Folks
  • "Take Off", a 1981 song by Bob and Doug McKenzie from The Great White North
  • Other uses

  • Take Off!, a 1988 board game
  • Take-Off (Transformers), a fictional character in the Transformers world, debuting in 1991
  • Takeoff!, a 1980 collection of humorous material by Randall Garrett
  • Take-Off, amusement ride
  • See also

  • Material take off
  • Take It Off (disambiguation)
  • Take-off (Vivid song)

    "Take-off" is the debut single released by the Japanese band Vivid. A document music video was made for the title song, and is available on the limited B CD+DVD edition of their major debut (and fifth overall) single ""Yume": Mugen no Kanata" along with a live performance of the titular track taped at Shibuya-AX on August 8, 2010. The single reached number 3 on the indies Oricon weekly charts and number 63 on the overall charts where it charted for a week; it has sold 1,319 copies.

    Track listing

    Take Off (EP)

    Take Off is the first extended play by Japanese band Folks, independently released on March 29, 2013. It was the band's first release, and their only self-issued album before their major label debut under Ki/oon Music in 2014.

    Background and development

    Folks first formed in 2013 when former Galileo Galilei members Fumito Iwai and Kazumasa Noguchi moved back to their birthplace of Hokkaido to start a band, and officially became a unit in January 2013. Iwai and Noguchi asked former Guild member Yoshitomo Kobayashi to join their band, and they moved to Sapporo, renting a house with Iwai's older brother Katsutoshi Iwai and his friend Masatsugu Takahashi, who also had a separate band. All five people practised music in their own rooms, but because Katsutoshi Iwai's room was a Japanese style room, the other band members could hear him through the thin shōji walls. In late 2013, Fumito Iwai heard his brother creating the song "River," and liked it so much he asked to arrange the song. All the house-mates loved the completed song, and decided to merge their two bands to create Folks.

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