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.

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Tomoyo Harada -- Kotoba Dori(コトバドリ)


The last time I wrote about singer/actress Tomoyo Harada(原田知世), it was back in April when I put up an article about one of her very early aidoru-era singles, "Tokimeki no Accident"(ときめきのアクシデント).


Tonight, however, this is for her latest single, her 31st, which came out in July 2019, "Kotoba Dori" (Word Birds) which happily expresses the power and flight of words. Written and composed by singer-songwriter Ryuichiro Akamatsu(赤松隆一郎), it's a cheerful and soaring tune with a whole bunch of instruments getting together for a light jam session including a piano solo and fun and relentless jazzy drumming. Harada's soft vocals can even be said to be leading the whole bunch as they fly over the Earth. I guess bird really is the word here.


"Kotoba Dori" also became part of NHK's "Minna no Uta"(みんなのうた)series for children and it was watching the video on TV less than an hour ago that I decided to write about the song although I've seen it a number of times. The video above though seems to be the one that had originally been done for "Kotoba Dori" as opposed to the one created for the NHK show.

The TUBE -- Sailing Love(セイリング・ラヴ)


When I was listening to Come Along Radio's "City Pop Summer Mix #3" the other night, I encountered a song that I had never heard before but identified it unmistakably as a TUBE tune. My assumption was that it was one of their later singles going into the 1990s.


Once again, I was wrong. In fact, "Sailing Love" was the first track on the band's first album "Heart of Summer" released all the way back in July 1985. Furthermore, TUBE wasn't TUBE at the time. Nobuteru Maeda(前田亘輝)and the guys were known as The TUBE...I gather that in the name of Japanese formality, they wanted that definite article.😏


Written and composed by longtime TUBE associate Tetsuro Oda(織田哲郎)with Shuusuke Nagato(長戸秀介)also working on the lyrics, "Sailing Love" was a pleasant "How do you do?" to the listeners of this new band bringing that sunny summer beach time fun that would characterize the TUBE sound for years to come. "Heart of Summer" peaked at a respectable No. 29 on Oricon and it would include their debut single "Best Seller Summer" which had been released in June 1985 with a No. 13 ranking.

It wouldn't be a "Kayo Kyoku Plus" summer without a TUBE song. Hope the boys are still cheering up the fans in Japan and elsewhere somehow during this pandemic.

Midori Kinouchi/Kumiko Matsuo -- Tokyo Meruhen(東京メルヘン)



Welcome back to the blog, Midori Kinouchi(木之内みどり). It's been about 5 years, and I found this 7th single by her titled "Tokyo Meruhen" (A Tokyo Fairy Tale). When I wrote about her more successful "Yokohama Eleven"(横浜いれぶん)back in 2015, I remarked that lyricist Takashi Matsumoto(松本隆)had come up with the words for her 5th to 10th singles with surprisingly none of them becoming hits.


As well, folk singer-songwriter Takuro Yoshida(吉田拓郎)was responsible for "Tokyo Meruhen" from November 1976 which apparently didn't do much on the charts since I didn't see anything forthcoming from Oricon. Yet, I think this one isn't too bad at all because of its infusion of country twang and something like a French pop style in the arrangement by Takahiko Ishikawa(石川鷹彦). The lyrics by Matsumoto speak of a woman feeling like she's been taken for granted by her feckless lover.
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In January 1984, aidoru Kumiko Matsuo(松尾久美)released a cover of "Tokyo Meruhen" as her 4th and final single in her brief career in the geinokai. The Tokyo-born Matsuo made it through NTV's audition show "Star Tanjo!"(スター誕生!...A Star Is Born) in 1982 and made her debut in 1983. In addition to those 4 singles, she also released one original album in that same year. After giving up the aidoru part of her career, she went into acting and modeling but the latest information on her time in show business was dated 1986.

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Yuka Iguchi -- Platinum Disco(白金ディスコ)


Yuka Iguchi(井口裕香)has been a seiyuu name that I've often seen through various anime that my buddy has shown me over the past decade, but for the life of me, I am admittedly hard-pressed to name any of the characters that she has played. In fact, the only one that I know off the top of my head is Mako Reizei(冷泉麻子), the extremely competent yet very unmotivated tank driver in the "Girls und Panzer" franchise.


Of course, that makes the above scene all the more noteworthy (and adorable) in what might be one of the most out-of-character moments in anime.


However, I can perhaps add one more memory of Iguchi into the old brain but not especially through her character of Tsukihi Araragi(阿良々木 月火)in "Nisemonogatari"(偽物語...Fake Stories) which came out in 2012. This is a show that I never saw but I've heard about the surprisingly intriguing toothbrushing scene. In any case, my new Iguchi memory has formed due to her providing the third opening theme for the show "Platinum Disco".


First off, my compliments to the director for the opening credits, Yukio Takatsu(高津幸央). But Iguchi has also given me a fine aural memory due to her catchy and adorable song which seems to inject some of that titular disco into a piece of soundtrack from a chambara series. Let's just imagine John Travolta back in the late 1970s prancing around medieval Japan in a chonmage and that would be my "Platinum Disco". The song was written by Satoru Kousaki(神前暁)and composed by meg rock, the same duo behind "Ren'ai Circulation"(恋愛サーキュレーション)which was an opening theme for "Bakemonogatari"(化物語), a sister series to "Nisemonogatari". And like that one, I first heard "Platinum Disco" when it used to be played on a lot of those zany Anime Brain videos.

Nice way to finish off tonight with an earworm once again burrowing through my head.


SHAMBARA -- Lovin' You


Well, it's been a while but maybe for Hump Day Wednesday, we can bring on some SHAMBARA.


Around 3 1/2 years ago, I introduced this City Pop/AOR supergroup consisting of members from fusion band Casiopea (カシオペア) and vocalists Kaoru Akimoto(秋元薫)and Yurie Kokubu (国分友里恵)along with instrumentalists Nozomi Furukawa(古川望)and Kunihiko Ryo(梁邦彦). The band lasted for perhaps a year or so but it was quite a ride on their lone album "Shambara" from 1989.

I remember putting up the catchy-as-all-heck "Solid Dance" and just marveling that Akimoto and Kokubu were singing together with a part of Casiopea backing them up. Well, the track following "Solid Dance" cools things down significantly to a slow dance. "Lovin' You" is interesting in that it begins with a piano solo that feels like it's going into a certain ballad style but then suddenly the synths come in to take things into a different love song direction.

No matter though. "Lovin' You" is gentle and soulful and it sounds so 1980s. It would have been quite the thing to have heard this at my university prom since I graduated right in that year of 1989. Listening to it would have been so easy...finding the date was the hard part. However, the song is something that can be appreciated at any time of the day.

Yujiro Ishihara -- Omoide no San Francisco(想い出のサンフランシスコ)/The Peanuts -- San Francisco no Hito(サンフランシスコの女)


Last night, I had the opportunity to listen to Come Along Radio's latest Summer Mixtape and in what has become a custom, I enjoyed the hour-long session while watching another enjoyable J Utah video, this time a drive through San Francisco. I also had the opportunity to visit the city almost 30 years ago while I was taking a trip with some of my fellow colleagues at the Board of Education for my town on the JET Programme. We were able to visit Fisherman's Wharf, Chinatown, and the zigzag Lombard Street among other places. My only regret was that we couldn't get to see the Golden Gate Bridge because of another San Francisco phenomenon: the fog.

J Utah in his description for this particular video mentioned that this was filmed during the current pandemic so traffic is lower and I have also noticed that a lot of the shops have been boarded up. This hit home especially on the news that many areas in the United States including California have had to backtrack on any re-openings. And so I'm hoping that my friends in the Golden State, fellow KKP contributor Larry Chan in the SFO area and Come Along Radio's Rocket Brown in LA, are hanging in there, as well as my other friends elsewhere in the country.


One of my most cherished standards happens to be "I Left My Heart in San Francisco", and of course, the ultimate singer for this classic is Tony Bennett. However, having said that, the first time I ever heard "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" wasn't his rendition but one that was performed by The Norman Luboff Choir via that record collection of standards that my father had gotten along with the RCA stereo decades ago.



I love Bennett's version but there was also something very haunting and elegiac about the cover by The Normal Luboff Choir, almost as if their version was meant as a tear-jerking musical requiem for a beloved longtime resident in the City by the Bay. Unfortunately, I couldn't find their take on YouTube or elsewhere.

According to Wikipedia, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" was originally written back in 1953 by George Cory and Douglass Cross with Bennett's first recording his version in 1962. Of course, others have covered it over the decades and that includes Japanese singers according to what I got when I placed the Japanese translation of the title "Omoide no San Francisco" (San Francisco Memories) into the YouTube engine. One such English-language cover was by The Tough Guy himself, Yujiro Ishihara(石原裕次郎). The uploader states that Ishihara's version was recorded in 1974 and it can be found in his 5-CD "Ishihara Yujiro ~ Cover Song Shuu"(石原裕次郎 カバーソング集...Cover Song Collection). Ishihara is no Bennett but he's got the timbre and gravitas in his vocals to perform a pretty decent cover.

(Sorry but the video has been taken down.)

Judy Ongg(ジュディ・オング)also provided her version of "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" on a TV show and along with her wonderfully smoky delivery of the tune which I would love to have caress my ears in the minutes before slumber, there are other reasons for my choice. One is that I finally get to see trumpet player Shin Kazuhara(数原晋)for the first time and the other is that Ongg's cover is done in Japanese, thanks to Rei Nakanishi's(なかにし礼)lyrics.


In the "Killing-two-birds-with-one-stone" department, I also found a San Francisco-themed kayo to include here. Titled "San Francisco no Hito" (San Francisco Woman), this was The Peanuts'(ザ・ピーナッツ)33rd single from October 1971 and was the final part of the "Hito" (女)trilogy of songs that Emi and Yumi Ito(伊藤エミ・ユミ)recorded following "Tokyo no Hito"(東京の女)and "Osaka no Hito"(大阪の女)in the previous year.

While "Osaka no Hito" took things into enka territory, "San Francisco no Hito" is more into happy-go-lucky pop kayo although the story is more melancholy as a woman gets summarily dumped on one of those San Francisco slopes. The same duo behind "Osaka no Hito", lyricist Jun Hashimoto(橋本淳)and composer Taiji Nakamura(中村泰士), was also responsible for this one, and "San Francisco no Hito" was performed by The Peanuts at the 1971 Kohaku Utagassen at their 13th out of 16 appearances on the New Year's Eve special.

And no...The Peanuts' voicing of "Cisco, Cisco" wasn't probably not a premonition for a certain multinational technology conglomerate that rose up years later. To be honest, when I first heard those lyrics, my immediate thoughts went to a certain Starfleet captain-turned-religious emissary (yes, I know the spelling is different😒).


Finally to end things off, for those who have never heard of The Norman Luboff Choir, you can have a listen to another standard that coincidentally saw off the show in which that Starfleet captain had starred in. Wow, this was something...I never thought I could incorporate Tony Bennett, The Tough Guy, The Peanuts, "Star Trek" and J Utah into one article.

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Juicy Fruits -- Natsu Kaze Afternoon(夏風邪アフタヌーン)



Looking at what is trending on Twitter today, apparently today is National Nude Day. I'm fairly conservative about that sort of thing but I can promise you that I will give my respect to it later tonight when I take my shower.

However, perhaps I can be a bit daring right now and show off the cover for Juicy Fruits'(ジューシィ・フルーツ)5th album "Tennen Caffeine"(天然カフェイン...Natural Caffeine). Released in June 1983, the band led by vocalist/guitarist Atsuko Okuno(奥野敦子)is looking considerably less clothed for some reason.

Okuno was also behind the music for the first track "Natsu Kaze Afternoon" (Summer Cold Afternoon) with Machiko Ryu(竜真知子)providing the lyrics. Not quite as quirky as Juicy Fruits' most famous song "Jenny wa Gokigen Naname"(ジェニーはご機嫌ななめ), it's still got that light but propulsive New Wave beat as Okuno sings about a tryst that hasn't taken place with the excuse by one of the partners being that nasty summer cold.

So far, I haven't come across any Juicy Fruits songs that have been mundane at all. Maybe they were ahead of their time at that time, but a few decades later, I'm sure that they've picked up some more fans with their brand of pop.