Exodus (Hikaru Utada album)
| Exodus | ||||
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| Released | September 8, 2004 | |||
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| Length | 54:15 | |||
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UK album cover | ||||
| Singles from Exodus | ||||
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Exodus is the second English-language album (fifth overall) by Japanese and American singer-songwriter Hikaru Utada, released on September 8, 2004 by Island Records under the moniker Utada. Their first English-language album called Precious was released under the name "Cubic U". After being discovered in North America by Island CEO Lyon Cohen when they contributed to the Rush Hour 2 soundtrack, he was interested in signing Utada to his record label and they eventually accepted the offer. They traveled to New York City to sign the contract and began recording the studio album straight after their signing. However, during the time frame from 2002 to 2003, Utada was diagnosed with a benign ovarian tumour that needed surgery and treatment. They also married their then-husband Kazuaki Kiriya, which stopped recording temporarily.
Musically, Exodus incorporates several musical genres including dance music and electronic music, whilst also incorporating several elements from electronica, avant-garde, alternative and glitch music. Exodus is their first studio album to have full English-language tracks since their album Precious under the alias Cubic U. The majority of the tracks on the album were written, composed and produced by Utada, with additional contributions completed by Timbaland, Danja and Teruzane Utada. Lyrically, the album deals with several human-related stories from a third-person perspective. Themes incorporated inside the album are love, prostitution, lust, their heritage, and break-ups.
Upon its release, Exodus received positive reviews from most contemporary music critics. Many critics complimented the composition experimentation and Utada's vocal deliveries on certain tracks. However, critics were divided towards the lyrical content and felt the production and album was only trying to attract a wider audience through the Western market. Exodus was a commercial success in Japan, peaking at number one and sold over one million units in the country, making it Utada's highest-selling English studio album there. It was certified one million by the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ). In North America, Exodus peaked at number 160 on the Billboard 200.
Four singles were released from the album. The first single "Easy Breezy" failed to gain success in both Eastern and Western territories, but the following single "Devil Inside" peaked at number one on the US Hot Dance Club Songs, making it their highest charting effort regarding any Billboard chart. The final North American single "Exodus '04" charted moderately in America overall, while the lead UK single "You Make Me Want to Be a Man" failed to achieve higher success in that region as well. To promote the album, Utada had commenced their Utada Hikaru In Budokan 2004 tour.