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, March 12, 2021

Yuji Mitsuya -- After Five At Café-Bar

 

Yuji Mitsuya(三ツ矢雄二)is a name that I've come across a number of times so I was a little surprised when I realized that he hadn't been on the blog until today. And his name is one that is probably at legendary levels since he's been active since 1976 as a seiyuu in major roles including that of Tatsuya Uesugi in the 1980s baseball anime "Touch"(タッチ)and Virgo Shaka in "Saint Seiya". In recent years, he's even played the Big Bad in "Smile Precure" along with his own contribution in the insane anime "Pop Team Epic".

What I didn't know was that the Aichi Prefecture native has also been an actor, a music producer and a TV personality. Plus, the label of singer can also be attached to his resume. Case in point: he released an album in 1984 titled "Hi-Touch" which seems to reside in the realm of City Pop.

The track on display tonight is "After Five At Café-Bar", a song created by lyricist Keiji Mizutani(水谷啓二)and composer Akira Kitazawa(北沢明). Yup, it's very downtown and it looks like Mitsuya beat Will Smith to the punch several years before Smith's theme for "Men In Black" since it sounds like a good dollop of Patrice Rushen's 1982 "Forget-Me-Nots" was used for "After Five At Café-Bar". When I heard it for the first time, I even thought that there was even some of Lionel Richie's "Love Will Find a Way" in the way that Mitsuya first delivers his vocals, and "Love Will Find a Way" is one of my favourite soul ballads of all time (future ROY article, to be sure).

Will always appreciate a bouncy bass and twinkly Fender Rhodes in a song. And the title reminds me of the times that some of my friends and I in Tokyo met up a little earlier on a Friday night before the main group so we ended up in a nice little coffeehouse or bar somewhere to wile away the time. Hachiko in Shibuya was always packed!

Just for comparison's sake, have a listen to "Forget-Me-Nots" by Patrice Rushen.

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