I remember
finding Minako Tanaka (田中美奈子) very similar
to Chisato Moritaka (森高千里) when I saw her
for the first time singing “Namida no Taiyou” (涙の太陽), her debut single. Something
about the look, or, more specifically, the revealing tiny and tight skirt along
with the long black hair, almost confused me a bit. The year of the performance
was 1989, a good time for an aidoru to debut with an eurobeat style song. And that was the
music style that Minako and the team behind her relied on the most.
Here’s the “Namida no Taiyou” performance that got me hooked in Minako Tanaka two years
ago. The song is an eurobeat cover of Michi Aoyama’s (青山ミチ) rendition, which was a
Japanese cover of “Crying in a Storm” by singer Emy Jackson (エミー・ジャクソン), who was born in
Japan but raised in England.
As for “Yume Mite TRY”, Minako’s third single,
released in May 1990, it was a “Stock Aitken and Waterman” (SAW)
inspired eurobeat/synth-pop aidoru
song. With an overall cheerful vibe,
the song is marked with sharp synth
notes and a prominent bass line,
two remarkable characteristics of the vintage italo-disco/eurobeat style from
the mid-to-late 80s.
Particularly,
I always liked Minako’s vocals, and she was a good live singer too. Her vocals
were very clear and strong when needed. Unfortunately, the “sexy aidoru” slice of
the market was already filled at the time, as she was kind of overshadowed
by the aforementioned Chisato Moritaka. Truth is that the more “sexy aidoru” never
got very popular during the late 80s/early 90s, with Chisato being the most
famous among the sexy divas. Minako Tanaka, Reiko Kato (かとうれいこ) and the “soft porn” Aya
Sugimoto (杉本彩) were relegated to lower places at the time. The winds of change just came around the mid-90s when acts like Ryoko
Shinohara (篠原涼子), Namie Amuro (安室奈美恵) and MAX gained popularity exactly for portraying a
sexier, edgier and more mature style if compared with the kawaii aidoru stereotype of the whole 80s. Irony of the
destiny, these mid-90s acts were also investing in the same dance-pop/eurobeat
style that Chisato, Minako, Reiko and Aya were trying to popularize in the early
90s. Don’t get me wrong, this music style was very popular at the time, with acts
like Wink, Kyoko Koizumi (小泉今日子), TM NETWORK, and even Chisato Moritaka, releasing
successful eurobeat penned songs, but the
Japanese “dance craze” took the charts by storm just during the mid-to-late 90s,
a time when Minako and Aya were not even singing anymore, while Reiko was
struggling to chart well with a new music style. The only one who continued to
be successful was Chisato Moritaka, but she just put all the glitter and
synthesizers away to do so*. Being a very talented lyricist and
instrumentalist, she had even more success with her “more mature” pop/rock and
ballad-oriented material between the mid-to-late 90s than with her “magical girl from a shoujo manga” persona
portrayed in the early 90s (she would even wear capes in some of her performances at
the time).
I needed to share
this video. Chisato is singing while looking cool in a cape. The song is “Aru
no OL no Seishun ~A Ko no Baai~ (Moritaka Connection)”, another light eurobeat/synth-pop
song. By the way, the performance is from late 1990.
Back to “Yume
Mite TRY”, an interesting fact about the song is that Tetsuya “TK” Komuro (小室哲哉) was the man behind its lyrics, music and
arrangement. I remember reading an
article about Komuro saying that he went to England in 1988 to study the pop
music that was being developed there**. Based on that, it’s important to
remember that in 1988 SAW’s hit factory was at its peak, and as a great
visionary as he was, Komuro understood that dance-pop and eurobeat were very lucrative genres that had yet to be
fully explored in Japan. TM NETWORK’s “GET WILD ‘89”, which I wrote an
entry for “Kayo kyoku Plus” sometime ago, is a good example of Komuro’s overall
commitment to the style.
Other than
that, “Yume Mite TRY” differs a lot from
the edgier techno-ish stuff that he was responsible for around the mid 90s,
a time when TK produced a ton of successful acts like TRF, hitomi, Namie Amuro and
former girlfriend Tomomi Kahala (華原朋美). All of them, alongside many others, were relying
exclusively on his beats and synth tricks to survive in the charts. Also, this
period, known as the “TK era”,
distinguished him as the “invincible
producer” of the J-Pop scene, a title that he had yet to conquer in May
1990 when “Yume Mite TRY”, a typical
eurobeat aidoru song, was his
newest creation.
To enjoy "Yume Mite TRY" being performed live, here's the link. Sorry for the quality, but Minako's videos are not easy to find.
“Yume Mite
TRY” ended reaching #12 on the
weekly Oricon chart, making it the best
ranked single of Minako’s entire career (source: Oricon).
*To read more
about my reflections on the same subject (the link between eurobeat and aidoru), I recommend my entries for “Forever Dreamer” by Megumi Hayashibara, “Overheat Night” by
Chisato Moritaka and “GET WILD ’89” by TM NETWORK here in Kayo Kyoku Plus.
**If someone wants to
read the article about Tetsuya Komuro, here’s the link for it. It’s a very interesting read: http://www.cjas.org/~leng/komuropa.htm
And here are
some photos of my own copy of Minako’s "GOLDEN BEST", a nice compilation with “Yume Mite TRY” as
the fifth track.
Hey, Marcos.
ReplyDeleteThanks for putting a Minako Tanaka song up. I've only heard her once in my entire life and that was on a Music Station episode about a good quarter-century ago. I've basically just known her as the actress and commercial pitchperson. But just seeing that long hairstyle and the jeans again brings back a lot of memories of those days of J-Pop back in the day.