It's been a while since I put up my last Hiromi Iwasaki(岩崎宏美)posting, and a commenter for that last posting mentioned about this song, "Watashi Tachi"(Us). I refreshed my memory by playing the song on YouTube....and it was immediately familiar to me. However, I had to wonder a while where I had first heard it. Going through my discs of the singer, I realized it wasn't in there since my earliest CD of hers was from 1978. Actually, I first heard it on an old audio tape of her best hits that my Mom had gotten me back in 1985.
As I mentioned in my reply to my guest, hearing "Watashi Tachi" again was an evergreen pleasure. It was actually the B-side to her 2nd single, "Romance"(ロマンス), released in July 1975, but I think it sounded wonderful enough to have earned its own place on the A-side. And as my commenter noted and as it has been pointed out in the J-Wiki article on "Romance", the production staff behind the single rather hemmed and hawed over which song would get that A-side, until they went with "Romance". However, according to Iwasaki herself, she also pushed for "Romance". The reason went something like this: a new aidoru back in those days often had to sing on the morning wide shows (news/entertainment programs), and the singer felt that belting out "Watashi Tachi" in the AM would have been more taxing; "Romance" was the easier choice for her.
"Watashi Tachi" was written and composed by Yu Aku and Kyohei Tsutsumi,(阿久悠・筒美京平) the same dynamic duo behind "Romance". And perhaps it was the Tsutsumi approach, but when I listened to "Watashi Tachi" again, I came to the realization that a number of Iwasaki's early uptempo songs reminded me of some of the disco hits that I used to hear as a kid, because of the trumpet-and-strings arrangement. As would be the case for a young teenager, the lyrics focus on a girl's ever-hopeful dream of getting that guy she's fallen head-over-heels for.
(3:34)
Mako Ishino(石野真子)was an aidoru I used to know just through her pictures in some of the kids' magazines that I had bought (or more accurately, my parents bought) at the Japanese food store, Furuya, in Chinatown. I remember her for her rather snaggle-toothed smile, or yaeba(八重歯). Back in those days, having a grin that only an orthodontist would love here was one of the greatest features that an aidoru could have since it was seen as a major charm point. In fact, when Ishino debuted in 1978, she was labeled as the aidoru with "the million-dollar smile", and having slightly droopy eyes also helped enhance her popularity.Ishino's years as an aidoru were just from 1978 to 1981. However, sometime during that period, she did a cover of "Watashi Tachi"; the arrangements were pretty much identical to the ones for the Iwasaki original. It was never released as an official single and although I looked around the Net, I couldn't find out when and on which album it was released.
As with a lot of former aidoru, Ishino soon made that transition to acting, commercials and appearances as a tarento on TV.
Oh, an 岩崎宏美 song that I didn't know about -- and, given the team behind it, liking it is a foregone conclusion. Thanks for the post!
ReplyDelete(I think Firefox might have been eating my comments for some reason, but if not, I apologize for the double submission.)
Morning, ジョン。
DeleteNo problems here. Your submission is solidly single.:)I always enjoy coming across a nice song that I hadn't heard about...doing this blog has helped out in that endeavour.
It would certainly look like the Aku-Tsutsumi combo was a songwriting dream team.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI found Mako cover in her best hit album from 1979. There maybe other album or single which contains it.