Second Cup Cafe: Utada
Japanese-American Pop Sensation Who's Taken Japan's Music Industry By Storm Makes Her U.S. TV Debut
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Play CBS Video Video Discover Utada She's already sold over 50 million albums worldwide, and now, Japanese-born singing sensation Utada has her sights set on the U.S. The youthful singer performs at the Second Cup Caf?.
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Born in New York City, Utada has become a pop sensation in Japan, where her 1999 debut album, "First Love," is the country's biggest-selling album ever. (CBS)
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The 26-year-old singer/songwriter has sold more than 52 million albums worldwide. (Y. Kikuma)
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The Early Show Second Cup Café Check out performances by artists who take to our stage each Saturday morning.
Born in New York City, Utada spent most of her life in transit, going back and forth to Tokyo, where she has become hugely successful.
The young talent, often referred to by the media as the Britney Spears of Japan for being a huge pop sensation there, is very different from the once-troubled pop diva.
Instead, Utada has proven she can also be a focused, straight-A student. She attended Columbia University for a short time and told Time magazine back in 2001 that, someday, she could see herself studying neuroscience, and pictured herself in a long, white lab coat working long hours in front of test tubes.
Utada returned to the Big Apple and stopped by The Early Show Saturday Edition's "Second Cup Cafe," making his U.S. television debut, to perform her hit songs, "Come Back To Me" and "Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence."
Music is in her blood: Her father, Teruzane Utada, was an accomplished musician and producer, and her mother, Keiko Fuji, was a successful Japanese enka (ballad) singer.
The past decade has been nothing but noteworthy for Utada. Her 1999 debut album, "First Love," is Japan's biggest-selling album ever. Three of her albums rank among the Top Ten best-sellers. She also has had twelve number-one hits, including four songs in Japan's all-time Top 100. Overall, she's sold more than 52-million albums.
"When I start making a song, for one second I see an amazing view - and in that instant, it cracks and falls to pieces," Utada said on her official Web site. "Then, the rest of the process is trying to put the pieces back together. So when it feels familiar, when I see what I saw in that moment the song was conceived, then I know it’s done."
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