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 Shizue Abe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shizue Abe. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Shizue Abe -- Mizuiro no Tegami(みずいろの手紙)

 

A little over a month ago, when I posted Shizue Abe's(あべ静江)"Yurameki"(ゆらめき), commenter Jim Laker suggested that I try Abe's earlier hit "Mizuiro no Tegami" (Water-Coloured Letters). I hadn't known much about Abe's discography but noticed that the song also had its own J-Wiki file so I gave it a shot.

"Mizuiro no Tegami" was actually Abe's 2nd single from September 1973, released about half a year following her successful debut of "Coffee Shop de" (コーヒーショップで), and it's a very sweet tune along the theme of "Absence makes the heart grow fonder" as a lass pines for a beau that she hasn't been able to see in some time. Lyricist Yu Aku(阿久悠)and composer Takashi Miki(三木たかし)were behind this one as they were for her first single. One would think that cute little birds would amass around the lass' bedroom window in an attempt to assuage her pain.

The song actually hit No. 7 on Oricon and became the 98th-ranked single for 1973. However, as I was reading the information on J-Wiki about "Mizuiro no Tegami", I noticed an interview that she had done in 2015 in which she admitted that she once hated the song and any other song whose lyrics seemed to pander toward men...almost to the point of tears of frustration at one point during recording. But then, at one concert, she noticed one woman in the audience crying her own tears for a different reason and realized that "Mizuiro no Tegami" had touched the audience member and was open and kind enough to express that. Abe had a change of heart after that and noted that the song was no longer just her song and perhaps was never her own song. It was a piece of work or art that got her further recognized in her career. Whether that means that she now actually likes the song isn't made clear but it's apparent that she sees it as her obligation to sing it since it makes others happy.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Shizue Abe -- Yurameki(ゆらめき)

 

It's finally feeling like a decent spring day out there after several days of chilly snaps and wet weather. Hopefully, Sunday has been a decent one for you as well.

Shizue Abe's(あべ静江)"Yurameki" (Fluttering) was her 11th single, released in February 1977. I first heard it when I was watching an old episode of "Yoru no Hit Studio"(夜のヒットスタジオ)the other day and the singer made her appearance. Written by Jiro Sugita(杉田二郎)and composed by Tsuzuru Nakasato(中里綴), it doesn't quite have the impactful percussion that started off her classic hit, "Coffee Shop de"(コーヒーショップで)from 1973, but the 1970s kayo sweetness with a pinch of uncertainty are there. Abe sings about a couple holding onto dear life figuratively as they wonder about the fragility of love during one sunset.  Y'know...investing in some life insurance can take the edge off a bit.

Not sure how it did on Oricon but may I say that it was a cute touch to have the fan blowing in Abe's "Yoru no Hit Studio" footage above. Anyways, I finally decided to put this one up after catching that scene of Ethan and Ilsa having one last tender moment in "Mission: Impossible ~ Dead Reckoning Part 1" (I've been going over some of the scenes recently). Talk about the fragility of love!

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Shizue Abe -- Coffee Shop de (コーヒーショップで)


When it comes to the jazz or Latin of Mood Kayo, I think of nomiya or the Akasaka Western-style bars. However, with coffee shops, I often imagine some of the folk/pop from the early 70s...the group GARO comes to mind, for instance. And so when I came across Shizue Abe's (あべ静江)video above, I just felt that I had to include this in the blog. Over the years, I did hear and see the name but never heard any of her music so when the video popped up on YouTube, I gave "Coffee Shop de" (At The Coffee Shop) a try and enjoyed the nostalgic pop from 40 years ago.

Written by Yu Aku(阿久悠) and composed by Takashi Miki(三木たかし), "Coffee Shop de" was released in May 1973, and it has that sweet, innocent song styling that I often associated with the feminine side of kayo kyoku at that time: the light and quick work on the keyboard, the smoothly flowing strings and the gently rolling beat. Aku's lyrics show the life inside one of those Mom-&-Pop coffee shops (way before the 90s invasion of Starbucks and Excelsior) with some of the moon-eyed musings of romance over a cup of java within the wood-and-plaster décor.

As for the Mie Prefecture-born Abe, she started her life in entertainment as a popular DJ at Tokai Radio Broadcasting during her university years when she parlayed that into a singing career. "Coffee Shop de" was her debut and it turned out to be her most successful hit. It sold over 250,000 copies and broke the Top 10 on the Oricon weeklies. Ultimately, it became the 38th-ranked song of the year. As icing on the cake, Abe even earned the Newcomers' Prize at the 1973 Japan Record Awards due to the success of her debut and her sophomore effort, "Mizuiro no Tegami"(みずいろの手紙...Water-Coloured Letters).


Later on, Abe would see further success as an actress in motion pictures and TV. Plus, she also carved out a regular presence on the variety-show circuit. For her recording career, though, she released several albums and 18 singles including her latest one in 2010.

The Café Copenhagen
in Jiyugaoka