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SUPER BEAVER Popular Song Ranking [2026]

SUPER BEAVER’s music is cool with its full-throttle energy and sense of speed, and the straightforward lyrics are irresistible! In every song, the electric guitar tones and the vocalist’s voice match perfectly, making you want to listen again and again! I’ve ranked some of Beaver’s most popular songs!

SUPER BEAVER Popular Songs Ranking [2026] (41–50)

Toward a Joyful TomorrowSUPER BEAVER43rank/position

In a word, it’s a song about parting.

But it’s not limited to romance—it’s meant to evoke farewells with someone important, in whatever way each listener imagines.

Even while steeped in regret and sorrow, it embraces all of that and sings toward a “joyful tomorrow.” Delivered with straightforward, powerful vocals, it becomes a song that gives you positivity and courage.

I’m just living for happiness.SUPER BEAVER44rank/position

SUPER BEAVER “We’re just living for happiness” MV (TV Asahi series ‘MARS: Zero no Kakumei’ theme song)
I’m just living for happiness.SUPER BEAVER

This is a powerful song that portrays the pursuit of happiness while confronting human loneliness and inner conflict.

It is included on SUPER BEAVER’s album “Ongaku,” released in February 2024, and was written as the theme song for the TV Asahi drama “MARS: The Revolution of Zero.” Within its emotional rock sound, it conveys the importance of living true to oneself and the hope that arises from our relationships with others.

This work gives you the courage to move forward while accepting painful experiences and sorrow as part of who you are.

It’s a song to listen to when you want to face the feelings in your heart with sincerity, or when you’re ready to take a new step forward.

TokyoSUPER BEAVER feat. Nagaya Haruko45rank/position

SUPER BEAVER feat. Haruko Nagaya – Tokyo / THE FIRST TAKE
TokyoSUPER BEAVER feat. Nagaya Haruko

SUPER BEAVER’s Ryuta Shibuya and Ryokushaka’s Haruko Nagaya appear in the first installment of the Asahi Super Dry × THE FIRST TAKE collaborative web commercial, titled “Tension & Release: Ryuta Shibuya × Haruko Nagaya.” The title track “Tokyo” from SUPER BEAVER’s second album since returning to a major label is a refreshing number with a straightforward rock sound.

Seeing two leading artists in today’s J-POP scene layering their vocals while sipping beer is enough to set your heart ablaze just by watching the ad.

It’s a soulful rock tune whose arrangement may change, yet the beauty of its melody still shines through.

word; language; speech; expressionSUPER BEAVER46rank/position

It’s often said that words carry a spirit within them.

This piece seems to ask what happens to your heart when you tell a lie with your words.

Words and the heart are closely intertwined, and this song makes you reflect on keeping both in balance.

gazeSUPER BEAVER47rank/position

SUPER BEAVER “Gaze” MV (Theme song for the film ‘Kaneko Sashiireten’)
gazeSUPER BEAVER

This song has a very cool, band-like vibe! Especially the way the chorus builds—doesn’t it feel great to sing? I get the impression that SUPER BEAVER doesn’t have many songs in a high range and generally leans lower, and the vocal range for “Manazashi” is C3–A4, so it should be easy for men with lower voices to sing! SUPER BEAVER is very popular, so it seems tough to get concert tickets… They have a lot of cool songs, so adding them to your karaoke repertoire is sure to get everyone hyped!

flashSUPER BEAVER48rank/position

This song “Senkou,” included on the 2018 album Before the Cheers, is likely to really resonate with young people—especially those without clear goals or who are just drifting through each day.

It’s a track packed with what makes SUPER BEAVER so great: they sing smoothly yet passionately about things that are obvious but seldom said—the kinds of words that can feel embarrassing to speak out loud—and they do it in a way that speaks directly to you.

homeSUPER BEAVER49rank/position

SUPER BEAVER “home” ~ “To a Joyful Tomorrow” LIVE
homeSUPER BEAVER

It’s a song about the importance of having a place to say “I’m home,” a place to return to—the very thing that lets us keep going even as we suffer through days filled with endless self-questioning—Is this okay? Is this right?—and with a vague, gnawing inner conflict.