"Yumemiru Planet"
Single by Yōko Oginome with Ugo Ugo Lhuga
from the album De-Luxe
LanguageJapanese
English titleThe Dreaming Planet
B-side"Ai wa Yume, Koi wa Maboroshi"
ReleasedMay 21, 1993 (1993-05-21)
Recorded1993
Genre
LabelVictor
Songwriter(s)
  • Yumi Yoshimoto
  • Nao Asada
Producer(s)Yōko Oginome
Yōko Oginome singles chronology
"Romantic ni Aishite"
(1992)
"Yumemiru Planet"
(1993)
"Tokyo Girl (Club Mix Version)"
(1993)
Music video
"Yumemiru Planet" on YouTube

"Yumemiru Planet" (夢みるPLANET, Yumemiru Puranetto, lit. "The Dreaming Planet") is the 27th single by Japanese singer Yōko Oginome. Written by Yumi Yoshimoto and Nao Asada, the single was released on May 21, 1993, by Victor Entertainment.[1][2]

Background and release

The song was used as the ending theme song of the Fuji TV children's variety show Ugo Ugo Lhuga (ウゴウゴ・ルーガ, Ugo Ugo Rūga), featuring Hidetō Tajima as Ugo Ugo-kun and Yuka Koide as Lhuga-chan on backing vocals. Oginome was also a regular in the show as Planet-chan.

"Yumemiru Planet" peaked at No. 33 on Oricon's singles chart and sold over 47,000 copies.[3]

Track listing

No.TitleLyricsMusicArrangementLength
1."Yumemiru Planet" (Yumemiru Puranetto (夢見るPLANET, "The Dreaming Planet"))Yumi YoshimotoNao AsadaShirō Sagisu 
2."Ai wa Yume, Koi wa Maboroshi" ((愛はユメ恋はマボロシ, "Love Is a Dream, Love Is an Illusion"))Miyuki AsanoAkitoshi Onodera
  • Yukio Sugai
  • Kōichi Kaminaga
  • Ryūjin Inoue
 
3."Yumemiru Planet (Original Karaoke)" ((夢見るPLANET(オリジナル・カラオケ), "The Dreaming Planet (Original Karaoke)"))    
4."Ai wa Yume, Koi wa Maboroshi (Original Karaoke)" ((愛はユメ恋はマボロシ(オリジナル・カラオケ), "Love Is a Dream, Love Is an Illusion (Original Karaoke)"))    

Charts

Chart (1993) Peak

position

Oricon Weekly Singles Chart[4] 33

References

  1. "Discography". Yōko Oginome Official Website. Retrieved July 11, 2021.
  2. "夢みるPLANET | 荻野目洋子". Rising Production. Archived from the original on July 11, 2021. Retrieved July 11, 2021.
  3. "荻野目洋子(シングル)". Yamachan Land (in Japanese). Archived from the original on May 24, 2011. Retrieved July 11, 2021.
  4. 1968-1997 オリコン チャート・ブック (in Japanese). Tokyo: Oricon. 1997. p. 64. ISBN 4871310418.
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