Credits

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.
Showing posts with label Kanae Ito. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kanae Ito. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Kanae Ito, Mai Nakahara, Kana Ueda and Mamiko Noto -- Romantic Strike (浪漫ちっくストライク。)


Well, another Sunday of anime and food. And I got to see more of the 2009 TBS anime "Taisho Yakyu Musume"(大正野球娘。...Taisho Baseball Girls), the heartwarming tale of a group of high school girls in Taisho Era Japan trying to create their own baseball team. I did mention in the article for "Tokyo Bushi"(東京節), the musical number that the main character of Koume sings in the first episode, that her performance was the only spot of zany humour I saw. Ah, once again I spoke too soon. Last night, I saw a couple of later episodes which were downright out in left field (pun fully intended) and then I came across the above YouTube capture of a scene that I will probably catch next time at my friend's place which covers the usual anime trope of walking through a scary forest. Much hilarity ensues.

The other observation was realizing how many well-known seiyuu were crammed into this show. Of course, back then perhaps not all of them were as famous as they are now, but still to know that a number of these ladies would end up in some of my favourite anime such as the "Fate/Stay Night" franchise, "Uchoten Kazoku"(有頂天家族)and "Gekkan Shojo Nozaki-kun"(月刊少女野崎くん)was enough to feel that with "Taisho Yakyu Musume", I was watching something even more special.


Anyways on to the topic of the article. The opening theme song "Romantic Strike" hasn't exactly become an earworm like seiyuu Kanae Ito's(伊藤かな恵)rendition of "Tokyo Bushi", and in fact, I had to refer to the video on YouTube to remember how exactly the song went, but still listening to it again with Ito and her fellow cast members Mai Nakahara(中原麻衣), Kana Ueda(植田佳奈)and Mamiko Noto(能登麻美子)had me getting happy again. Written by rino and composed by Takayuki Hattori(服部隆之)who I just wrote about the other day for creating the dramatic soundtrack to the old PS1 game "I.Q.", the song is all sunniness and cherry blossoms that had me pining for some of the J-Pop tinged with a bit of disco or Shibuya-kei at around the turn of the century with Misia and bird among other singers. It was arranged by Kaoru Okubo(大久保薫)who would come up with an even breezier and happier anison some years later.


I love the horns in the opening credits but boy, do they turn loose in the full version of the song. Kinda wonder if Ito and company looked pleasantly surprised when the trombone and trumpet burst out in the second verse. "Romantic Strike" managed to hit a double of sorts when it reached No. 58 on Oricon.


Monday, January 11, 2016

Kanae Ito -- Tokyo Bushi (東京節)


My friend and I had our first Sunday anime meeting of the year yesterday, and as such, we haven't found anything that particularly stands out as of yet. So we tried out a number of new shows yesterday including the suspense-thriller "Boku Dake ga Inai Machi"(僕だけがいない街...ERASED), the loopy countryside comedy "Dagashi Kashi"(だがしかし)and the rakugo drama "Showa Genroku Rakugo Shinjuu"(昭和元禄落語心中). However, the after-dinner wrap-up consisted of the first half of an anime that had actually been broadcast all the way back in 2009, "Taisho Yakyu Musume"(大正野球娘。...Taisho Baseball Girls).

My friend had gotten the DVD set well over a year ago but it was only within the last couple of months that he finally decided to break open the seal and take a gander. As has been the case with a lot of shows ranging from "Sailor Moon"(セーラームーン)to "Girls und Panzer", this particular show has a bunch of young girls getting together haphazardly to eventually achieve a worthy goal...in this case, making a decent high school baseball team to show the guys that girls can play the game, too...all against the backdrop of the prosperous Taisho Era in Japan (1912-1926)....specifically 1925.


Watching the first half of the series was pretty much as expected: the recruitment of the members, the early struggles, the first hints of success and then some setbacks. But a few minutes into the pilot episode, I suddenly had the feeling that I was about to view a musical when the character of Koume Suzukawa(鈴川 小梅)breaks into adorable song about her love for Tokyo as she tries on a sailor-suit school uniform for the first time. For a show that has kept out the usual funny faces and exaggerated actions, Koume's performance of "Tokyo Bushi" (Tokyo Melody) is probably the only example of flat-out goofiness that I've seen in "Taisho Yakyu Musume".


I actually had to find out what the title of the song was via YouTube. I enjoyed the really cheerful arrangement and thought that a contemporary composer and arranger concocted "Tokyo Bushi" to sound like that march without all of the fuzz from an old-fashioned gramophone. As it turned out, though, there is quite a bit of history.

For one thing, "Tokyo Bushi", which is also known as "Pai no Pai no Pai"(パイノパイノパイ), was actually created in the Taisho Era. 1919, to be specific. Although the lyrics were provided by Satsuki Soeda(添田さつき), the original song was based on an American marching song by Henry Clay Work titled "Marching Through Georgia" at the end of the US Civil War in 1865.


It's pretty fascinating comparing "Marching Through Georgia" and "Tokyo Bushi" since the former definitely sounds Sousaesque while I would have sworn that the latter was a pure kayo piece.


And there is a very long list of Japanese entertainers who have covered "Tokyo Bushi" over the decades. Heck, even the comedy team of The Drifters(ザ・ドリフターズ) did their own disco-spiked version called "Dorifu no Pai no Pai no Pai"(ドリフのバイのバイのバイ)which was released as a single in 1976.


The seiyuu behind Koume is Kanae Ito(伊藤かな恵)...a name that I have heard before but not as familiar to me as other folks such as Ami Koshimizu(小清水亜美), Saori Hayami(早見沙織)or Ayane Sakura(佐倉綾音). So I was quite surprised to realize that this was the same actor who would later take care of the character of Sena Kashiwazaki(柏崎星奈)in the hilariously warped "Boku wa Tomodachi ga Sukunai"(僕は友達が少ない).

Asakusa, one of the shout-out places in "Tokyo Bushi"