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.

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Junichi Inagaki -- Memory Flickers

 

I've often called crooning drummer and singer Junichi Inagaki(稲垣潤一)one of the princes of City Pop all these years, and he definitely has the flair for the urban contemporary.

However, I've also realized that Inagaki, through listening to his music, also has a love for the pop inspired from the 1950s and 1960s. I think one example is his "Memory Flickers", the penultimate track from his April 1989 album "Heart & Soul". The No. 1-ranking release has been labeled a City Pop album but "Memory Flickers" feels more like an homage to those earlier decades although the music seems to have been filtered as well through contemporary arrangements and synths.

Written by Masao Urino(売野雅勇), those opening notes of "Memory Flickers" resemble the notes in the intro of Anri's(杏里)classic "Kanashimi ga Tomaranai" (悲しみがとまらない), and perhaps this shouldn't be surprising since both songs were composed by the one-and-only Tetsuji Hayashi(林哲司). Beyond those introductory bars though, Hayashi's arrangements take us through a mix of thrumming keyboards and what sounds like some Motown spice. Urino's lyrics talk about a man reminiscing about a love triangle years or decades ago in which he was one of the corners competing against one male corner for the hand of a female corner. Not sure who won but I get the feeling that the main man is feeling rather bittersweet about the experience. In any case, "Heart & Soul" ended 1989 as the 47th-ranked album.

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