People on both sides of the Pacific are most likely still enjoying a hopefully relaxing transition from the Holidays back into regular work days. The Japanese are only in their second day of the New Year's celebrations while folks here in Canada and the United States are lucky enough to have a compensatory day off since January 1st fell on a Sunday this time around.
First off, I would like to thank Larry Chan for his two-part essay on his feelings on the annual Kohaku Utagassen which took place a couple of days ago for the 73rd time. My family and I opted to catch our PVR'ed version last night after dinner on New Year's Day. Among my clan, I am by far the most patient and accepting of contemporary Japanese pop music but I have to admit that I was surprised that for No. 73, there was far less fast-forwarding on the remote control by my brother than had usually been the case, and that's a sign of the tone of how I felt about the show.
I'm not bothering with putting up any YouTube NHK footage of the show since I know that it will all get taken down soon, but I will post up some representative photos. My first observation of No. 73 is that it did follow the "Love & Peace" theme in obvious and subtle ways. Bringing in the Mouse House will usually signify that, although I did hear on the local news channel that a notice had been sent out by the folks managing the Disney resorts pleading for no more abuse by customers ("oh, OH, oh, OH! No, not the ears!"). Also, despite or due to the renovations done to NHK Hall, the relationship between the audience and the performers seemed more intimate; there was more performance done at the very front of the stage, though things could get grand when demanded by certain performers.
Also, perhaps reflecting on the past year which had its share of celebrity deaths and retirements, there was more poignancy which garnered more of that closeness. Enka singer Kiyoshi Hikawa(氷川きよし), entertainment legend Yuzo Kayama(加山雄三)and one member of the vocal group Junretsu(純烈)said their goodbyes although Hikawa said that he would return. Anzen Chitai(安全地帯)had a near tear-inducing ballad and then a kickass performance of an old favourite while paying tribute to band drummer Yuuji Tanaka(田中裕二)who had passed away in November. I was surprised by the appearance of comedy group Dacho Club(ダチョウ俱楽部)for one number especially following the sudden death of member Ryuhei Ueshima(上島竜兵)earlier in 2022.
The return of the grizzled veterans was something that I noticed happening in a flurry shortly after announcing the main lineup. But it did look like the OB/OG Week on the Kohaku with not only Anzen Chitai and Kayama, but also Yumi Matsutoya(松任谷由実), Ryoko Shinohara(篠原涼子), Tetsuya Komuro(小室哲哉), Keisuke Kuwata(桑田佳祐), Char (among others), Shizuka Kudo(工藤静香), and even a vocal cameo by the one-and-only Tatsuro Yamashita(山下達郎) on behalf of another long-time-no-see act, KinKi Kids. Yamashita was truly a surprise since I didn't think that he was too much of a fan of the Kohaku despite his wife appearing on the special a few years ago, and he didn't hold back on his disdain for the AI Hibari Misora(美空ひばり)project which had culminated in its premiere in the 2019 edition.
Speaking of all of that computer stuff, I wasn't all that enthused by the appearance of virtual Yumi Arai(荒井由実)in Yuming's(ユーミン)performance (although I saw that she had to put on the "wetsuit" and dots). It was too brief and not that impressive although Arai at the piano did introduce the real McCoy's lovely performance of "Sotsugyo Shashin"(卒業写真), the first Yuming-penned song that I ever heard.
There is a "Japan Times" article about the biggest J-Pop hits of the year coming from Tik-Tok and anime. The Kohaku was also another mirror of confirmation on that as I noticed a slightly larger coterie of anison performers on the show this time around. And Fujii Kaze's(藤井風)"Shinunoga E-Wa"(死ぬのがいいわ)got its huge break on Tik-Tok. It was from this angle that got me to bookmark a number of songs to cover in the next number of days including an ending theme from "Spy x Family". Thank you, Kohaku!
From AsianWiki |
本当だ!just went to wiki and Hirosue Ryouko did appeared in Kouhaku! 😅
ReplyDeleteI was utterly disappointed not to see Akina. She was invited to Kouhaku in her 20th anniversary back in 2002 but not her 30th and 40th. Too bad. From her teeets, to which I subscribe, it looks like everything has been settled. I hope she’s back to normal.
I have a feeling that more and more hit songs will come from anime moving forward. Japanese dramas are in decline and honestly I wouldn’t be watching them if not for my Japanese studies. On the other hand, it seems that there’re quite a number of anime that caught world attention like Kimetsu no Yaiba and Jujutsu Kaisen, all of which I watched in US movie theaters.
I barely remember seeing her on the Kohaku on a television set at the Tokyo Prince Hotel on December 31st 2001. A bunch of us had just eaten at a udon restaurant near the hotel and we were just making our way to Zojoji Temple next to the Prince.
DeleteMy impression is that just setting up the website and the company took a lot out of Akina. So I didn't have any great hopes that she would appear on the Kohaku, unfortunately.
A lot of the anime fans were probably quite happy to see "Kimetsu no Yaiba" and "Spy x Family" get their due on the show. As for Japanese dramas, even my friend who used to see them quite a lot is saying that they've gone considerably downhill in interest over the past several years. He's more into Korean dramas now.
Speaking of Japanese dramas, I think we're going to hear more of them in the coming years since Netflix is investing a lot of money into developing them like they did with Korean dramas. The Netflix original, "First Love" did pretty well, season 2 of Alice in Borderland came out a couple weeks ago and while it wasn't a Netflix original, the drama "Silent" did very well in Japan and abroad(that's where the Official Hige Dandism song "Subtitle" comes from).
DeleteYeah, I heard that "Silent" was gaining a fine reputation out there. One of the other commenters also mentioned it. To be honest, I don't think that I'll ever get back into J-dramas (and I'm no longer even interested in the stuff here in Canada or the United States), but if Netflix can help get some more and better product out there, power to them.
DeleteIt was great seeing Anzen Chitai - it reminded me of 80’s karaoke and mixed tapes!
ReplyDeleteHi, Laura. Good to hear from you and Happy New Year! Yes, it was good hearing from them again seeing the old songs. Tamaki's voice is still amazing!
DeleteI don't know if it's indicative of NHK not being able to find veteran enough performers or of the Japanese music scene in general that they have the same two last singers for the third year in a row. At least they have Fukuyama closing the show with a song I expected him to have performed the same year it blasted through the charts.
ReplyDeleteMorning, Jenard. Not sure if it's a reflection of the sign of the times when it comes to who ends the show for both teams. It used to be that the veteran enka singers would do that but a good chunk of them have retired, and enka has become fairly minimized on the Kohaku these days. I think part of it is talent and gravitas which both Misia and Fukuyama have, but I hope that for the 74th edition, the producers come up with different singers. If, let's say, Sayuri Ishikawa decided to hang up her Kohaku career at the end of this year, then she could be the final act for the Red team.
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