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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.

Monday, October 16, 2023

A Tribute to Shinji Tanimura(谷村新司)

 

Singer-songwriter Shinji Tanimura passed away on October 8th 2023 at the age of 74. Most of us had only heard about his death late on the 15th or early on the 16th, and according to NHK and Wikipedia, though at this point, the cause of death hasn't been announced, Tanimura had been suffering from enteritis earlier this year.

Born in December 1948, he was the son of a couple who ran a hot spring in Nagano Town in Metropolitan Osaka. In 1965 while in high school, he along with Chizuko Shimazu(島津ちづ子)and Mineyuki Yamamoto(山本峰行)formed the folk trio The Rock Candies(ザ・ロック・キャンディーズ), a group in the style of Peter Paul and Mary. Several years later in 1971, Tanimura and Takao Horiuchi(堀内孝雄)created the folk group Alice(アリス)which had a more folksy rock style and begat hits such as "Fuyu no Inazuma"(冬の稲妻).


While with Alice, Tanimura was also providing songs for other singers, notably "Ii Hi Tabidachi" (いい日旅立ち) for Momoe Yamaguchi(山口百恵), one of her last big hits in 1978. Tanimura would cover the song in an even more genteel manner in 1986.

As I mentioned in the original article, Tanimura and his partner Horiuchi would come up with the hit "Kimi no Hitomi wa Ichi-man Boruto"(君のひとみは10000ボルト)in 1978, and though I had thought it was an Alice song, it was officially a single pegged to Horiuchi.

Alice may have been known for its good time rock n' roll folk but Tanimura's solo work could be described as elegant. At one point, I was wondering whether the singer had actually opted to become an enka singer but his material wasn't quite that traditional-sounding. Instead, I would categorize it as that middle ground between kayo kyoku and enka known as New Adult Music. It was often classy, epic, orchestral and dignified. His 1980 "Subaru"(昴)was the first Tanimura song that I'd heard as a soloist at my old karaoke joint Kuri, and I can imagine that on hearing of his passing, a lot of karaoke singers gave their tribute to him by tackling this one.

Another ballad that had some shivers going up my spine when I first heard the intro was his 1983 "Nijuuni Sai"(22歳). It had the folksy beat from his past and the epic dignity of his present (at the time).

Through Noelle Tham's article in 2014, I found out that Tanimura along with fellow songwriter and singer Yuzo Kayama(加山雄三)had been the ones behind "Sarai"(サライ), another epic ballad of inspiration and reassurance. I had assumed that the song was a lot older than its 1992 birthdate considering that it's been used for a certain NTV telethon year after year just like how "Auld Lang Syne" has been used to signal the end of every edition of the Kohaku Utagassen on NHK.

The final song that I'll leave here in this tribute to Tanimura is a new one on KKP. "Gunshou"(群青...Ultramarine) was his 4th single released in July 1981 and it was the theme song to the August 1981 Toei Studios movie "Rengo Kantai"(連合艦隊...Imperial Navy) which described the downfall of the Japanese Navy in World War II. According to the J-Wiki article on the song itself, Tanimura had initially turned down the request by the movie's director Shūe Matsubayashi(松林宗恵)to create a theme song for "Rengo Kantai" because of the subject matter. However, Matsubayashi was finally able to persuade him by relaying his approach and opinions, and "Gunshou" was the result. The late Katsuhisa Hattori(服部克久)arranged both "Gunshou" and "Subaru", and when Hattori passed away in 2020, Tanimura himself gave great praise on Hattori's arrangements.

Tanimura leaves behind three children including singer-songwriter Shiori Tanimura(谷村詩織). I offer my condolences to his family, friends and fans.

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