Thursday, October 5, 2023

Eiji Miyoshi -- Ame(雨)

 

It was just back on Tuesday that I wrote about another song titled "Ame" (Rain) which was a 2009 ballad by singer-songwriter Jun Shibata(柴田淳). Well, I noticed that there was one other "Ame" right close to it in the backlog, so I've given that one a go, too.

Actor-enka singer Eiji Miyoshi(三善英史)has been mentioned once before on "Kayo Kyoku Plus" for a 1979 cover of "Shinjuku Jouwa"(新宿情話). But right from the start of his career, he was suddenly given tons of accolades and popularity. First, if I can add a little more to his profile, Miyoshi was born Teruhiko Tamura(田村照彦)in Shibuya Ward, Tokyo as the son of a geisha and as a teen, he was scouted for his good looks and size.

However, much to everyone's further delight, Miyoshi also had a voice to match, and in May 1972, his debut single "Ame" was released. Given the tags of both enka singer and aidoru, the 17-year-old's light and dancing voice tripped the light fantastic over Kazuya Senke's(千家和也)melancholy lyrics of a woman waiting in the rain on Saturday afternoon, perpetually waiting for the man who will never arrive to court her for some reason. Keisuke Hama's(浜圭介)oboe or clarinet-led melody adds to the bittersweet situation with some lower strings taking the baton as well.

"Ame" did hit a nerve with listeners. The song managed to earn the Best New Artist prize at the Japan Record Awards that year, along with a Silver award at the Shinjuku Music Festival, and another Best New Artist prize at the Japan Kayo Awards. On the Oricon weeklies, "Ame" went as high as No. 2 and it could have hit the top spot but the eventual song of the year, Shiro Miya & The Pinkara Trio's(宮史郎&ぴんからトリオ)"Onna no Michi" (女のみち)didn't relent. As it was, though, the song sold over half a million records and eventually became the 18th-ranked single for 1972. Ironically, although Miyoshi performed in the Kohaku Utagassen three consecutive times from 1973 to 1975, none of his songs were "Ame".

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