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 Tom Coster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Coster. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Tom Coster -- I Give My Love to You

 

What further cemented my fan love for singer Ruiko Kurahashi(倉橋ルイ子)was my purchase of her 1986 LP "Main Course". Not surprisingly, the KKP article for "Main Course" was one of the first ones I did on the blog for an album. Right from the first track, it held me in its thrall with its mix of sophisticated pop, jazz and City Pop.

And speaking of that first track, "Koi Hitosuji ni"(恋ひとすじに) is one prime example of sophisticated pop that felt like Kurahashi singing from some late afternoon or early evening balcony overlooking the French Riviera. With lyrics by Yu Aku(阿久悠)and the melody by American keyboardist Tom Coster, I'd assumed for years that Coster had contributed the song just for Kurahashi as a single and then as the track to begin "Main Course", and nothing was noted about it on the American side of things.

Well, I was completely wrong about that. It turns out that "Koi Hitosuji ni" was a cover version of Coster's original "I Give My Love to You" from his 1983 album "Ivory Expeditions". And the original, though the basic melody is intact, still gives off something very different in its arrangement. For one thing, it's an instrumental that is fusion with a heavier emphasis on the jazz side of things, and for another, there is an electric guitar solo by Joaquin Lievano that had me thinking Santana, and as it turns out, Coster did work with the band Santana on many occasions. In fact, one of the commenters for the above video remarked that the original "I Give My Love to You" is basically a Santana song. I'm trying to imagine that...a Fashion Music chanteuse covering a Santana ballad.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Ruiko Kurahashi -- Main Course

(excerpts only)

"Main Course", Ruiko Kurahashi's(倉橋ルイ子) 12th album released in March 1986, was the first album that I'd bought by this lovely balladeer at that Chinatown record shop a few decades ago. Her previous albums were known mostly for her lilting adult contemporary songs, but this album had Kurahashi going for a little more of the European sophisticated pop and jazz. In a way, she was following a bit along the lines of Taeko Ohnuki(大貫妙子) in the 1980s.


The first track is "Koi Hitosuji ni"恋ひとすじに....Eng. title: I Give My Love to You) which is a ballad of sophisticated pop written by Yu Aku (阿久悠)and composed by Tom Coster, an American keyboardist. Listening to this, you just kinda get this French ennui and champagne feeling.


Track 4 is the torch song "Gas Tou"(ガス燈....Gaslight) which has Ruiko in full jazz mode, complete with shimmering strings, horns and a bluesy sax solo by regular session musician Jake H. Concepcion. Melodically, there are some resemblances to Frank Sinatra's "I'm A Fool To Love You". For me, this is my favourite song on the album. I don't drink, but whenever I hear this, I just want to get a whiskey on the rocks. Akira Ohtsu and Kingo Hamada(大津あきら・濱田金吾)were behind the creation of this classic.


The 2nd last track of the album is "The Best In My Life", written by Yumi Yoshimoto(吉元由美), who wrote a lot of Anri's(杏里) songs. The composer Katsuo Ono(大野克夫) and arranger Etsuko Yamakawa(山川恵津子)definitely made this to be the Whitney Houston entry of the album. It has that soft beginning and ending bracketing an epic soaring climax that has characterized a Whitney ballad. The video above has Kurahashi performing at Nakano Sun Plaza, Tokyo in 2009.

I like to dedicate this album to a fellow Ruiko fan on the Mixi SNS in Japan, C.C. Baxter (yes, named after the beloved Jack Lemmon character in "The Apartment"), on his birthday today. He was very generous a few years ago by providing me with a couple of her increasingly rare CDs, one of which was her debut album, "Without Sugar".