Credits

I would like to give credit where credit is due. Videos are from YouTube and other sources such as NicoNico while Oricon rankings and other information are translated from the Japanese Wikipedia unless noted.

Friday, October 14, 2022

Naomi Maki -- Aquarius

 

I always enjoy encountering a singer whom I've never heard of before with a good song, especially when the genre involved is City Pop.

Recently, that person is Naomi Maki(マキ奈尾美)who, according to one website of hers, is a singer-songwriter, abstract painter, jazz pianist and instructor. As far as I can tell, she has only released one album for commercial fame and fortune, and that was back in 1986 (YouTube and one other site state 1987 but her own website says 1986 and who am I to argue with that?). That album is titled "Time, Time After Time".

One track is "Aquarius" which was composed by Maki and written by Erika(えり花)according to an entry on Light Mellow BU's own review of "Time, Time After Time". The song is a very slick City Pop number with some of that sophisticated pop flavour that would imbue a lot of the genre in the latter half of the 80s. Certainly, that image of caviar and champagne in Bubble Era Japan comes to mind when I listen to "Aquarius". Heck, I'm sure that there was probably a fancy bar somewhere in Tokyo with that name; there was a sky-high Toronto bar known as Aquarius that some of us frequented back in my university days. The YouTube uploader for the above video, nana's, has the impression that "Time, Time After Time" is an OK but not spectacular album (the video, and maybe even nana's, was taken down; it has been replaced by the video from fuyu aranko) . Still, I'd be interested in finding out more about the other tracks.

After looking at both Maki's and BU's sites, I've found out that the singer apparently got married to a diplomat which has resulted in her living in New York, London, Seoul and Moscow. She's also learned about her fair share of other types of music including classical Italian music and songs from England of the 15th and 16th centuries.

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