Kyōhei Tsutsumi | |
---|---|
Born | Eikichi Watanabe May 28, 1940 |
Died | October 7, 2020 Tokyo, Japan | (aged 80)
Other names | Jack Diamond |
Alma mater | Aoyama Gakuin University |
Occupation(s) | Composer, music producer, arranger |
Years active | 1963–2020 |
Musical career | |
Genres | Pop, rock, kayokyoku, soft rock, enka, easy listening |
Instrument(s) | Piano, harpsichord |
Labels | Sony, EMI, Victor, King, Nippon Columbia |
Kyōhei Tsutsumi (筒美 京平, Tsutsumi Kyouhei) (born Eikichi Watanabe, 28 May 1940 - 7 October 2020), was a Japanese composer, record producer and arranger.
Tsutsumi began his career as a songwriter about 1966, and he came to prominence as a composer of Ayumi Ishida's chart-topping hit "Blue Light Yokohama" in the late 1960s. He has released nearly 3,000 compositions to date, over 500 of which have entered the Japanese Oricon singles chart. Tsutsumi is the most commercially successful composer of the Japanese popular music of last five decades, selling over 76 million units on the country's singles chart from 1968 onwards.[1][2]
Two of his compositions won the grand prix of Japan Record Award— "Mata Au Hi Made" performed by Kiyohiko Ozaki in 1971 and "Miserarete" by Judy Ongg in 1979.[3][4] Tsutsumi himself has also won the awards for best songwriting category five times.[5] Recognized for his long-term contribution to establish Japanese popular music, Tsutsumi received the Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon by the Government of Japan in November 2003.[6]
Tsutsumi died of aspiration pneumonia on October 7, 2020, after home recuperation, at age 80.[7][8]
Eikichi Watanabe (渡辺 栄吉, Watanabe Eikichi) was born on May 28, 1940, in Ushigome, Tokyo City, now part of Shinjuku Ward. He was a student of Aoyama Gakuin, one of the most prestigious educational institutes in Japan. Watanabe learned piano when he was in kindergarten, and joined the college's jazz club in his teen years. After graduating from University, Watanabe worked as a director of Nippon Grammophon, a Japanese record label which later changed its name to Polydor Japan and is now owned by Universal Music Group. Tadataka Watanabe, his younger brother, became a record executive too, who has been chief producer of Warner Music Japan and well known as a discoverer of multi-million selling folk-rock duo Kobukuro.[9]
On the suggestion of lyricist Jun Hashimoto, his senior graduate of university, Watanabe began his songwriting career under the pen name Kyohei Tsutsumi. "Kiiroi Lemon", his first recorded compositions co-written by Hashimoto and sung by then-unknown Masato Shimon (using stage name Kōichi Fuji), was issued as a single in 1966. However, it was initially released as a work composed by Kōichi Sugiyama, and Tsutsumi's name was not credited on the original pressing of the record.
Tsutsumi's first hit, "Barairo no Kumo", was performed by the Village Singers and released as a single in 1967. He rose to fame in 1969, after release of "Blue Light Yokohama" recorded by singer and actress Ayumi Ishida. It was released as a single on Christmas Day of 1968 and topped the Japanese Oricon sales chart in the following year, becoming the fifth record to have sold over 1 million copies since the chart started counting sales in 1968. As a composer of the song, Tsutsumi won the 11th Japan Record Awards for the best songwriting category on December 31, 1969.[10]
In 2020, he became one of eight recipients of the Special Lifetime Achievement Award at the 62nd Japan Record Awards.[11]
During the late 1960s and the 1970s, Tsutsumi released the following of his own albums. Most of those efforts were reissued in 2006, as part of compilation series entitled Kyohei Tsutsumi Solo Works Collection released by five different labels — EMI Music Japan, Sony Music Entertainment, King Records, Victor Entertainment, and Nippon Columbia.
Album | Details |
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Piano ga Utau "Osanai Hi" (ピアノが歌う“幼い日”) |
|
Cembalo Deluxe Vol.1: Koi no Kisetsu (恋の季節) |
|
Cembalo Deluxe Vol.2: Nanairo no Shiawase (七色のしあわせ) |
|
Cembalo Deluxe Vol.3: Ano Hi Nagisa de... (あの日渚で…) |
|
Futatsu no Hoshi (二つの星) |
|
Hit Piano Touch |
|
Hit! Hit! Hit!: "Shiranaide Aisarete/Koibito" (知らないで愛されて/恋人) |
|
Easy Listening Deluxe Album: Kyohei Tsutsumi Hit Original Sound by 16-ch System |
|
Headlight |
|
Bacharach Meet the Beatles |
|
Dynamic Young Hit Deluxe |
|
Tsutsumi Kyohei no Hibiki (筒美京平の響) |
|
Seishun no Harmony: Mirai kara Kita Tegami (青春のハーモニー~未来からきた手紙~) |
|
Eiko e no Dasshutsu (栄光への脱出) |
|
Spectacle Sound by Special Request |
|
Hit Machine: Tsutsumi Kyohei no Sekai (筒美京平の世界) |
|
Year | Single | Performer | Lyricist |
---|---|---|---|
1968 | "Blue Light Yokohama" (ブルー・ライト・ヨコハマ) | Ayumi Ishida | Jun Hashimoto |
1971 | "Mata Au Hi Made" (また逢う日まで) | Kiyohiko Ozaki | Yū Aku |
1973 | "Akai Fūsen" (赤い風船) | Miyoko Asada | Kazumi Yasui |
"Watashi no Kare wa Hidari-kiki" (わたしの彼は左きき) | Megumi Asaoka | Kazuya Senke | |
1974 | "Yoroshiku Aishū" (よろしく哀愁) | Hiromi Gō | Kazumi Yasui |
"Amai Seikatsu" (甘い生活) | Gorō Noguchi | Michio Yamagami | |
1975 | "Romance" | Hiromi Iwasaki | Yū Aku |
"Sentimental" | |||
1979 | "Miserarete (Theme of Aegean Sea)" (魅せられて (エーゲ海のテーマ)) | Judy Ongg | Yōko Aki |
"Sexual Violet No. 1" | Masahiro Kuwana | Takashi Matsumoto | |
1980 | "Sneaker Blues" (スニーカーぶる~す) | Masahiko Kondō | |
1981 | "Blue Jeans Memory" | ||
"Gingiragin ni Sarigenaku" (ギンギラギンにさりげなく) | Ayumi Date | ||
1982 | "Jōnetsu Neppū Serenade" (情熱熱風せれなーで) | Ayumi Date | |
"Furarete Banzai" (ふられてBANZAI) | Takashi Matsumoto | ||
"Harajuku Kiss" (原宿キッス) | Toshihiko Tahara | Akira Miyashita | |
"Shower na Kibun" (シャワーな気分) | Yoshiko Miura | ||
"Horetaze! Kanpai" (ホレたぜ! 乾杯) | Masahiko Kondō | Takashi Matsumoto | |
1983 | "Midnight Station" | ||
"Tameiki Rockabilly" (ためいきロ・カ・ビ・リー) | |||
"Royal Straight Flush" | |||
1984 | "Ichiban Yarō" (一番野郎) | Masao Urino | |
"Meikyu no Androla" (迷宮のアンドローラ) | Kyōko Koizumi | Takashi Matsumoto | |
"Yamatonadeshiko Shichihenge" (ヤマトナデシコ七変化) | Chinfa Kan | ||
1985 | "Majo" (魔女) | Takashi Matsumoto | |
"Nantettatte Idol" (なんてったってアイドル) | Yasushi Akimoto | ||
"Kamen Butōkai" (仮面舞踏会) | Shōnentai | Tetsuya Chiaki | |
1987 | "Ballad no You ni Nemure" (バラードのように眠れ) | Takashi Matsumoto | |
"Naimono Nedari no I Want You" (ないものねだりのI Want You) | C-C-B | ||
1987 | "Mizu no Rouge" (水のルージュ) | Kyōko Koizumi | |
"Stripe Blue" | Shōnentai | ||
"Sayonara no Kajitsutachi" (さよならの果実たち) | Yōko Oginome | Masao Urino | |
"Kimi Dake ni" (君だけに) | Shōnentai | Chinfa Kan | |
"Naite Mirya Iijan" (泣いてみりゃいいじゃん) | Masahiko Kondo | ||
"ABC" | Shōnentai | Takashi Matsumoto | |
1988 | "Jirettai ne" (じれったいね) | Hiromi Mori | |
1994 | "Tenca wo Torō (Uchida no Yabō)" (TENCAを取ろう―内田の野望) | Yuki Uchida | Kohmi Hirose, Sora Kawasaki |
1999 | "Yamenaide, Pure" (やめないで、Pure) | KinKi Kids | Takashi Matsumoto |
2003 | "Ambitious Japan! | Tokio | Rei Nakanishi |
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