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.

Sunday, December 31, 2023

Mieko Hirota -- Kanashiki Heart(悲しきハート)/Yasuo Tanabe -- Kumo ni Kiite Okure yo(雲に聞いておくれよ)

 

First off, for everyone in Japan: 「新年あけましておめでとうございます。今年もよろしくお願いします。」🎍

Here in North America, we're still in New Year's Eve and awaiting our own clock to strike midnight in several hours. It's been the usual December 31st with my family...quiet, getting things cleaned up and of course, I woke up this morning a couple of hours into the live broadcast of the 74th edition of the Kohaku Utagassen on NHK. Now, the thumbnail aside, I will give my own thoughts on the Red-and-White Song Festival when I get to see the whole she-bang over the next week or so and I have a feeling that a few more of us on the blog will do the same. However, to begin the final blogging on KKP for 2023, I'd like to go back in the Kohaku's history...60 years back, to be exact.


Yup, to keep within the theme of the New Year's Eve special, I'm heading back to the 14th edition at the end of 1963. It was a very different time and circumstances since the Kohaku that year scored an average rating of over 81%, the very peak of its popularity. In those days, there wasn't quite as much to do and see outside of the home as there is now, and music access wasn't nearly as widespread. 

For the 74th edition, we had this year's media darlings Atarashii Gakko no Leaders(新しい学校のリーダーズ)and JO1 leading things off. However, according to the J-Wiki account of the 14th edition, that show's top two batters were teenage sparkplug Mieko Hirota(弘田三枝子)and new Mood Kayo singer Yasuo Tanabe(田辺靖雄)which is why I'm doing the two-in-one today. Hirota, who was coming to the Kohaku for the 2nd time, launched the show off with her rendition of Susan Singer's 1963 "Lock Your Heart Away", titled in Japanese as "Kanashiki Heart" (Sad Heart) and released in July that year as her 13th single with Kazumi Minami(みナみカズみ)handling the Japanese lyrics over John Schroeder's original melody.


As I said, she was quite the sparkplug with that 60s girl pop. She looked like she could rival Wild Child Suzuka of Atarashii Gakko no Leaders in spunk. 



Yasuo Tanabe is someone that I'd mentioned in his first article that has had quite the show business connections, including the fact that he is the son of Masaharu Tanabe(田辺正晴)who actually hosted the first two editions of the national network's Kohaku Utagassen on radio in 1951 and 1952. So I gather that he may have been quite nervous making his debut onto the special in 1963. He sang "Kumo ni Kiite Okure yo" (Go Ask the Clouds), a song written and composed by Seiji Hiraoka(平岡精二)and one of those finger-snapping jazz orchestral standards that were common back in the day. The song has been attributed to him but I haven't been able to find it as a single or even as a B-side in his own J-Wiki discography so perhaps it was on one of this early albums or J-Wiki simply forgot to add it in.

Anyways, I'll be seeing if I can catch the re-broadcast of the 74th edition later tonight.

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