Yūko Andō 安藤裕子 | |
---|---|
Birth name | 安藤 裕子(Andō Yūko) |
Also known as | Üchary Andrew, Nee-yan |
Born | 9 May 1977 |
Origin | Kanagawa, Japan |
Genres | J-pop |
Occupations | Singer, songwriter, record producer, composer, actress |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1999–present |
Labels | Cutting Edge (2003–2016) Pony Canyon (2020–present); YS corporation(2003-2016) DG AGENT(2017-2019) Horipro(2019-) |
Website | Andrew Page |
Yūko Andō (安藤 裕子, Andō Yūko) (born 9 May 1977) is a Japanese singer-songwriter and former actress. Andō is part of the Horipro talent agency.[1]
Born in Kanagawa Prefecture, as a child, music was never a special hobby of Andō; rather she had more of an interest towards drawing. During her college years, driven by her strong interest in creating things, Andō decided to pursue a film making career. However, unable to catch a break with the studios, she then followed her friends and family's advice to join a talent agency in hopes of becoming an actor. This landed her a few spots as an extra in TV dramas.
One of the auditions for a play she passed during her Junior year at Ferris University required her to sing on stage. At that time, one of the evaluators was Oricon music charts founder Sōkō Koike and by his recommendation, she decided to pursue a career as a singer-songwriter.
Before debuting as a singer, Andō appeared as a regular in the popular TV drama "Ikebukuro West Gate Park" (2000) and the 1999 movie "Saimin".
In 2002, Andō sent film director Yukihiko Tsutsumi, whom she had gotten to know on the set of "Ikebukuro West Gate Park" a demo tape of "Rinjin ni Hikari ga Sasu Toki". Upon hearing her demo, Tsutsumi decided he had to include it in the movie he was then directing, 2LDK, as ending theme. She was credited as Yuuko Ando (安藤ゆう子).
In July 2003, Andō debuted under the Avex-owned sub-label, Cutting Edge, with the mini album "Sally". That same year she performed live for the first time at a convention concert held for Avex shareholders.
In November 2005, Andō's "Nouzenkatsura (Reprise)" was used in Gekkeikan's commercial for the "Tsuki" liquor. Because Andō was not credited in the actual commercial, the company was flooded with inquiries from people wanting to know the name of the singer, who for a period was confused to be Clammbon's Ikuko Harada. The song, based on a poem written by her grandmother over the loss of her husband, propelled Andō's second full album, Merry Andrew into the Top 10. The album was certified gold with over 100,000 copies sold. Following the success of the song, Andō was branded by the media as the "late-blooming princess" and "singer-songwriter of the next generation".
In December 2006, Andō embarked on her first live tour.
In April 2009, she released her first compilation album which featured a variety of songs handpicked by Andō herself. That same year, she wrote and performed the ending theme song, "Paxmaveiti", for the Nintendo DS video game Professor Layton and the Last Specter.[2] On 8 August 2010, she appeared at the World Happiness 2010 rock festival in Tokyo.
Andō writes and composes almost all of her songs, except for the occasional covers and collaborations with other artists. Andō's recording process consists of writing lyrics and composing melodies which she then records a cappella and passes over to Ryūji Yamamoto who is responsible for all her songs' arrangements. Yamamoto arranges Ando's demos based on these recordings. Pre-production meetings are held with Yamamoto, Andō and her producer, Yuji Andō, where they decide on the final direction for a track and select the musicians for the recording.
Like many other singer-songwriters before her, Ando's greatest influence is Chara, whom she first discovered through a friend in high school. For her big audition at Avex, Andō sang Chara's "Break These Chain". Another artist Andō listens to and lists as influence is Naoko Ken. Her lyrics tend to have happy endings. This has also been remarked in an interview by movie director and friend Yukihiko Tsutsumi, when he called her a "big happy end freak". Another influence is Yellow Magic Orchestra, whose 1983 song "Kimi ni Mune Kyun" she covered in her 2009 record Paxmaveiti.[3]
In recent years, Andō has started composing and writing for other artists, such as Yui Aragaki and Hisayo Inamori, as well as collaborating with them on her own songs. Andō also often records covers of songs from the 70's and 80's for her singles which she calls the "serious adult covers series".
Year | Information | Weekly Singles Chart |
Album |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Mizuiro no Shirabe
|
139 | Middle Tempo Magic |
2005 | Anata to Watashi ni Dekiru Koto
|
103 | Merry Andrew |
Lost Child
|
109 | ||
Samishigariya no Kotobatachi
|
35 | ||
2006 | TEXAS
|
45 | shabon songs |
The Still Steel Down
|
43 | ||
2007 | Unabara no Tsuki
|
12 | chronicle. |
2008 | Parallel
|
20 | |
2009 | Paxmaveiti ラフマベティ -君が僕にくれたもの-
|
26 | JAPANESE POP |
2011 | Kagayakashiki Hibi
|
53 | Kanchigai |
2015 | 360 ° Surround
|
59 | Itadaki Mono |
2017 | Ame to Pantsu
|
— | ITALAN |
2018 | Tantei Monogatari
| ||
Kore de ī nda yo
| |||
2019 | Koishī
|
Barometz | |
Kan
| |||
2021 | Shōgeki
|
49 | Kongtong Recordings |
ReadyReady
|
— |
# | Information | Weekly Albums Charts |
Sales |
---|---|---|---|
1st | Middle Tempo Magic
|
64 | — |
2nd | Merry Andrew
|
10[5] | 30,000 copies |
3rd | shabon songs
|
6 | 30,000 copies |
4th | chronicle.
|
11 | 32,217 copies |
5th | JAPANESE POP
|
10 | 18,000 copies |
6th | Kanchigai
|
16 | — |
7th | Good-Bye
|
13 | 6,559 copies |
8th | Anata ga Neteru Aida ni
|
29 | — |
9th | Itadaki Mono
|
21 | |
10th | Italan
|
58 | |
11th | Barometz
|
44 | |
12th | Kongtong Recordings
|
47 |