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 Takuya Jou. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Takuya Jou. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Masao Kikuchi/Teruhiko Saigo -- Furusato wa Souya no Hate ni(ふるさとは宗谷の果てに)

 

Over eight years ago, KKP contributor and specialist on the early Showa Era tunes, Noelle Tham, introduced the late singer Takuya Jou(城卓矢)and his huge hit "Hone Made Aishite" (骨まで愛して) from 1966.

As Noelle mentioned in that March 2015 post, Jou was born Masaki Kikuchi(菊地正規)and when he debuted in 1958, he took on the stage name of Masao Kikuchi(菊地正夫)with just that small alteration of one kanji. One of his notable songs under that pre-Jou name was his September 1962 kayo kyoku, "Furusato wa Souya no Hate ni". (My Home is at the End of Souya).

To further explain, Souya is the name of a cape in Hokkaido which is the northernmost point of all of Japan. The song was written and composed by Jun Kitahara(北原じゅん)who happened to be Kikuchi/Jou's older brother, and for both brothers, "Furusato wa Souya no Hate ni" was in all likelihood a very personal song for them. It's a gallant tune with a bit of a country twang but it's also a kayo about lamenting the fact that neither Kikuchi nor Kitahara could go back to the land of their birth because they had been born on what was known as Karafuto Island(樺太)but it's currently known as Sakhalin after the Soviet Union had taken it over at the end of World War II. I'm not sure how the song did in the pre-Oricon era but I figure that there was nothing like a furusato kayo kyoku to get people into a sentimental mood and hitting the record shops.

Certainly, the fact that "Furusato wa Souya no Hate ni" was covered by a number of other singers and bands in the years since is probably a good sign at its popularity. For example, just when Kikuchi made that re-debut as Takuya Jou, Teruhiko Saigo(西郷輝彦)covered the song in 1966 as a tune belonging more in the Mood Kayo vein thanks to the chorus and that bluesy saxophone. Saigo also gave his vocals a more elegiac tone.


To finish off, I've embedded a video from Kuga's Travel, one of the channels that I subscribe to. A year ago, he made his own trip to Souya.

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Takuya Jou -- Hone Made Aishite (骨まで愛して)


I don't see many songs with "Hone" (骨), the kanji character for bone, in its title... actually I don't think I've ever encountered any other song with this word in the title. Only "Hone Made Aishite". Upon seeing its name a number of months ago, I was indeed curious as to what the song was about since I understood the words "Bone" and "Love", but I couldn't seem to find any proper relation between the two. So my guess was that the fellow singing the song loves bones... which frankly is rather bizzare and disturbing, but I stuck with it anyway. As my understanding for the language improved a little and as I listened to "Hone Made Aishite" more often over the months, it suddenly occurred to me that this wasn't some love song dedicated to bones, but something far more normal and logical, something like "Love me to the bone" and NOT "I love bones".


Moving on, singing "Hone Made Aishite" was the late Takuya Jou (城卓也). This hit from 1966 that sold about 1.4 million copies was his 2nd debut single under this very name - he first debuted in the world of music as Masao Kikuchi (菊地正夫) in 1960 before this change 6 years later. The most interesting fact that I have read about Jou on the J-Wiki is that he was related to two well-regarded songwriters, who both had a hand in doing up the song. Composing the very 60's, easy-paced music for "Hone Made Aishite" was Jou's older brother, Jun Kitahara (北原じゅん), who had also composed a couple of songs for Jou in his Kikuchi days, as well as for other singers like the flamboyant Gosanke member, Teruhiko Saigo (西郷輝彦). And then writing the lyrics for the song was Jou's uncle, Kouhan Kawauchi (川内康範), a name I've often seen since he penned quite a handful of Mood Kayo hits like Hiroshi Uchiyamada and Cool Five's (内山田洋とクール・ファイブ) "Awazu ni Aishite" (逢わずに愛して) and Mina Aoe's (青江三奈) "Isezakicho Blues" (伊勢佐木町ブルース). The lyrics seems to be about our leading man here simply wanting his lady to love him deeply... to the bone (get it?)...

As I've mentioned earlier, "Hone Made Aishite" was very successful, and so it managed to give Jou his first ticket to the Kohaku on the very same year it was released in. There even was a movie based on the song itself in 1966, featuring acting stars from that era Tetsuya Watari (渡哲也), and of course, Ruriko Asaoka (浅丘ルリ子). Dang, she seemed to be in every other movie back in the 60's!

Huh, Jou was a pretty good-looking fella.
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