Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Katsuhiko Nakagawa -- Ryusenjou de(流線上で)

 

A couple of hours ago, I wrote up a Shoko Nakagawa(中川翔子)article so I decided that it was time to also write about her father, the late Katsuhiko Nakagawa(中川勝彦)who was also a singer and a TV personality along with being an actor, a musician and a seiyuu.

(30-second excerpt)

I don't know as much about Katsuhiko Nakagawa as I do his daughter but he was born in 1962 in Tokyo's Bunkyo Ward and made his debut in 1980 halfway during time as a Keio University student. His J-Wiki biography indicates that he may have been one of the first visual-kei rock pioneers, and I consider Kenji Sawada(沢田研二)to have had some influence on that genre as well.

For Nakagawa's first article on "Kayo Kyoku Plus", I found "Ryusenjou de" (On the Streamline) which is a track on his February 1984 debut album "Shitemitai"(してみたい...Wanna Give it a Try). Written by poet, essayist and lyricist Natsuo Giniro(銀色夏生)and composed by Toshio Kamei(亀井登志夫), "Ryusenjou de" seems to be about a song of longing for that lost love but when I hear that melody which includes an oboe, I can easily imagine Nakagawa sporting a very New Wave-y foppish outfit and attitude. There just seems to be an air of British pop from that period of time in the arrangement.

I have to admit that listening to Nakagawa's vocals took some getting used to. It is a very affected way of singing that I realize rather fits that somewhat foppish manner, and as such, has me thinking of Sawada during that same time. Dropping into analogy, I would compare it with entering a pretty hot onsen and having to gingerly enter the steaming waters before finally soaking and feeling at ease. Also with the arrangement and again with Nakagawa's singing, I also get some Ippu-Do vibes but without the synthesizers.

As his Wikipedia article states, Nakagawa released 10 singles and 9 albums including a posthumously released album in October 1995. He had passed away at the age of 32 on September 17, 1994 due to leukemia.

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