"Possibility (with
Daichi Miura)" Released: February 19, 2010
Identity is the seventh Japanese studio album (thirteenth overall) by South Korean singer
BoA. It was released on February 10, 2010, nearly two years since The Face. Commercially, the album underperformed in Japan in comparison to her previous albums, becoming her first to have not sold over 100,000 copies.
Promotion
The album was preceded in release by the singles "
Bump Bump!," a collaboration with
Verbal from the
hip-hop group
M-Flo, and "
Mamoritai (White Wishes)." The singles peaked at number five and number two on the
Oricon charts, respectively.[1][2] Also, there was an official music video for "Possibility". However, it was not released as a single.
Commercial performance
Identity debuted at number two on the daily
Oricon albums chart with 14,023 units sold in its first day and at number four on the weekly chart with 37,606 copies sold,[3] making it her first Japanese album that did not chart to number one, ending her streak of studio albums debuting at number one on the
Oricon weekly charts. Identity also became BoA's first studio album to not sell over 100,000 copies and to not receive certification.[4]
"Possibility (with
Daichi Miura)" Released: February 19, 2010
Identity is the seventh Japanese studio album (thirteenth overall) by South Korean singer
BoA. It was released on February 10, 2010, nearly two years since The Face. Commercially, the album underperformed in Japan in comparison to her previous albums, becoming her first to have not sold over 100,000 copies.
Promotion
The album was preceded in release by the singles "
Bump Bump!," a collaboration with
Verbal from the
hip-hop group
M-Flo, and "
Mamoritai (White Wishes)." The singles peaked at number five and number two on the
Oricon charts, respectively.[1][2] Also, there was an official music video for "Possibility". However, it was not released as a single.
Commercial performance
Identity debuted at number two on the daily
Oricon albums chart with 14,023 units sold in its first day and at number four on the weekly chart with 37,606 copies sold,[3] making it her first Japanese album that did not chart to number one, ending her streak of studio albums debuting at number one on the
Oricon weekly charts. Identity also became BoA's first studio album to not sell over 100,000 copies and to not receive certification.[4]