Wednesday, October 11, 2023

The Works of Nobuyuki Shimizu(清水信之), Part 1

From music.163

Being only a couple of months away from his 64th birthday in December, let me wish Nobuyuki Shimizu a very early Happy Birthday. My, he really cut a dapper figure on the cover of his sophomore solo album "Anything Goes" in 1982. It's been a long while since I posted a Creator article on the blog, and as I noted in Yasuhiro Abe's(安部恭弘)"Kanojo ni Dry na Martini wo"(彼女にドライなマティーニを)last Friday, I figured that Shimizu needed to get his due here soon.

The Tokyo-born Shimizu has had plenty of mentions on "Kayo Kyoku Plus" over the years. It's no surprise since he's not only a musician on the keyboards (main), guitar, bass and drums, having begun in the 1970s, but he has been a composer and an arranger since the 1980s. His connections with other figures in the Japanese music industry began very early in his life with one of his classmates in piano lessons being future fellow musician and songwriter Yuuji Toriyama(鳥山雄司). Additionally, during his time at Tokyo Metropolitan Matsubara High School, he created a band with his kohai EPO, Yoshiyuki Sahashi(佐橋佳幸)and others after which he became a student of the late Latin jazz pianist Naoya Matsuoka(松岡直也). 

From my view, Shimizu has been one of the most prolific songwriters and arrangers in Japanese pop music, so I realized that I need to divvy up this tribute to him in two parts. The first half will go into his early days as a band man and then arranger entering the 1980s.

(1979) Kinokuniya Band -- 4AM

When I first wrote about Kinokuniya Band(紀ノ国屋バンド)in 2018, it was for this jazzy cover of Taeko Ohnuki's(大貫妙子)"4AM" on their one-and-only album "Street Sensation" (1979). What I hadn't realized until later was that a 17-year-old Shimizu was a part of the band when they started up in 1976. Afterwards, he would also act as a support musician for Tatsuro Yamashita(山下達郎), Ohnuki and Mariya Takeuchi(竹内まりや)and become a general session musician.

(1980) Sayonara Mata Itsuka(さよならまたいつか)

Shimizu may be primarily known as someone who supports other singers but he has put out his own discography beginning with his 1980 "Corner Top" album. From that one is the romantic and urbane "Sayonara Mata Itsuka". Enjoy the sunset! 🌇

(1981) MASH -- LOVE


Shimizu was also involved in another short-lived if slightly flashier urban contemporary band project, MASH, with their own self-titled album in 1981. This time, he was matched up with his mentor Matsuoka, vocalist Yumi Murata(村田有美)and drummer "Ponta" Murakami(村上秀一). 

(1980) EPO -- Downtown


The way the J-Wiki timeline posits, Shimizu's arranging career started with his kohai and former school bandmate EPO's classic "Downtown", her debut single. A marked contrast from the original Sugar Babe New Music/rock tune from the mid-1970s, the half-decade-later cover has that added funkiness with synthesizers that make her "Downtown" a City Pop favourite and not a technopop tune. It really did sound like a welcome to bright and sparkly Tokyo of the 1980s, and for me, the template was set for Shimizu's arrangement style at least where this decade was concerned.

(1982) Yasuhiro Abe -- We Got It!


EPO was a frequent client of Shimizu but so was another City Pop veteran, Yasuhiro Abe, beginning with his own debut single "You Got It!". The fantastic and wailing electric guitar leading the way has struck me as another Shimizu trope during that time. Abe and Shimizu co-arranged this one.

(1983) EPO -- U, Fu, Fu, Fu (う、ふ、ふ、ふ)


Well, the aforementioned Abe and Ohnuki helped out on backup vocals for this Shimizu-arranged "U, Fu, Fu, Fu", a huge hit for EPO. The singer and the arranger collaborated to shape the melody into this bright and cheerful tune matching her style with the help of the keyboards and strings. The strings near the end really send listeners soaring into the ether.

(1984) Mari Iijima -- Ai Oboeteimasuka? (愛・おぼえていますか)


Composer Kazuhiko Kato(加藤和彦)and lyricist Kazumi Yasui(安井かずみ)created the most well-known song from the "Macross"(マクロス)anime franchise, and it was with Shimizu's arrangement that "Ai Oboeteimasuka?" became this epic aidoru-cute yet Zentraedi-destroying ballad. There wasn't anything urgent nor military about it at all; just a simple love song to the universe and a career-making song for Mari Iijima(飯島真理).

Hope to get Part 2 up at this time next week.

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