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#21
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Btw I always wondered how come seiko matsuda only release to sell over 1 million was the single あなたに逢いたくて~Missing You~.
She doesn't even has a 1 million selling album. Btw kuu's biggest hits in Japan should be cutie honey and Butterfly along with koi no tsubomi. I'm not sure that the general public remembers her for yume no uta or With your smile but most would remember the 3 I mentioned. Last edited by ayumisrael; 16th September 2015 at 08:40 AM. |
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#22
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#23
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#24
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It depends though since there are way older releases than the 80s that sold millions, like the best selling single in Japan was released on 1975 and it sold around 4,536,000 copies.
I know that popularity doesn't always are equal to sales but you would think that the popular most iconic ones would have at least some impressive numbers for certain releases. I mean even kuu had three million selling albums but from what I gathered seiko's impact was more powerful, like seiko is the uta hime of the showa era (while ayu is the heisei one like it was on Music Station last week). And also, I wonder what status hikki's mom reached fuji keiko/utada junko if she is important to mention. I didn't see she had a million selling release anyway but I remember she had releases that charted many weeks or that were #1 for many weeks and such and I also wonder how many other solo females (or bands with female soloists) that were really popular that we don't know of, if there were any more. Sometimes I wish we had some sort of official list of most popular japanese female soloists of all times, like general list, not necessarily with positions. Of course it should include all the female soloists that were ever popular in Japan, all of them. Doesn't matter if it's pop or enka (sales wise oricon treats both as one). Last edited by ayumisrael; 16th September 2015 at 07:14 PM. |
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#25
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If we're speaking about JPop icons, one of the biggest female, maybe even the biggest, is Hibari Misora. She made Enka music, but later also Kayokyoku, which is another older term for JPop. Hibari Misora wasn't just a singer, she is considered a cultural icon in Japan and even got the Medal of Honor.
She sold 68 million while living and up to the 21st century she apparently sold about 80 million records. Her last song "Kawa no Nagare no Yo ni" is probably one of the most known songs ever. There are tributes to her every year, she has her own museum, and I bet pretty much everbody in Japan (still) knows her. @ ayumisreal: There was a Top 20 female soloist list done by a japanese TV channel some years ago and we also got the video here. I still remember Kuu was at #18 and Hikki was pretty high, but that's all. Sadly I don't find it right now, but I can't even remember which show it was... This list would be great for this thread. If somebody remembers or finds it, please post it.
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Last edited by Corvina; 16th September 2015 at 08:00 PM. |
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#26
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Well we found the true icon. Utada who.
/thread |
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#27
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I thought that they covered at least the whole century, or everything at all. I personally know that oricon covers at least everything since the 60s included (and if she had any hit releases they didn't sell over a million post 1960). I would never question her popularity though since it is enormous she became like a constant of Japanese culture even after her death. Also kawa no nagare no youni was chosen as the most popular japanese song of all times in a poll of over 10 million people. Last edited by ayumisrael; 16th September 2015 at 10:54 PM. |
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#28
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And Oricon counts sales since Oricon's creation, they don't count the sales from people who had a whole successful career before the chart existed. And every other chart works the same way. |
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#29
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So the question is what was there before Oricon?.
I mean what tracked misora hibari's 80 million copies? Oh and I also wonder why she wasn't even on the music station episode. She should be the Showa era queen then, not seiko. |
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#30
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^Misora was releasing music since the late 40's, and Oricon only got fully estabished during the 70's... It didn't track the most of her career. Her sales number comes from her labels and the record producer association, most likely.
She most likely isn't considered the queen of the showa era either because she was around before the concept of being a popstar was created, or because the charts focused on newer acts to validate their own existance. |
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#31
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Here's the list of the latest Music Station Special for songs to be proud of showing to the world:
http://headlines.yahoo.co.jp/hl?a=20...3641-lisn-musi And what song is at #3? Kawa no Nagare no you ni by Hibari Misora, haha.
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#32
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#33
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This is a good although old list conducted among Japanese music critics. Some of the newer artists should move ahead in the list:
http://www.hmv.co.jp/news/article/311040091/ This sounds about right. The most iconic female artists are: Yumi Matsutoya, Hibari Misora, Momoe Yamaguchi, and Miyuki Nakajima. Right now, I would put Dreams Come True above Utada, and Namie much closer. Let's be honest. Artists such as Nana Kishino have strong fan bases, but to be iconic you have to appeal beyond a fan base. Be part of the overall musical conversation across generations and genres and not be limited to foreign fans, otaku fans, young fans, etc. Some people are too young to have historical perspective, or too ingrained in otaku subculture to be objective. That Music Station list is skewed toward recent releases, so I doubt it's reliable. Another list: Rolling Stone Japan's Greatest Rock Albums: http://exclaim.ca/music/article/fina...ms_of_all_time Some pop albums in there. Very good list, although it might appeal more to rock fans than pop fans. Many iconic albums, but the list includes brilliant albums that didn't achieve iconic status (Supercar, for instance). I'm trying to find another list of most important Japanese vocalists. Last edited by Uemarasan; 22nd October 2015 at 09:19 AM. |
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#34
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Sorry, I could only find my copy and not the proper link. Top 30 singers:
01. Tatsuro Yamashita 02. Momoe Yamaguchi 03. Keisuke Kuwata (from Southern All Stars) 04. Hibari Misora 05. Yumi Matsutoya 06. Kazumasa Oda (from Off Course) 07. Seiko Matsuda 08. Kazutoshi Sakurai (from Mr Children) 09. Yosui Inoue 10. Hikaru Utada 11. Eiichi Otaki 12. Kyu Sakamoto 13. Kenji Sawada 14. Akiko Yano 15. Motoharu Sano 16. Miyuki Nakajima 17. Eikichi Yazawa 18. UA 19. Kiyoshiro Imawano (from RC Succession) 20. Mariya Takeuchi 21. Shogo Hamada 22. Tamio Okuda (from Unicorn) 23. Akiko Wada 24. Masamune Kusano 25. Yutaka Ozaki 26. Keisuke Makihara 27. Miwa Yoshida (from Dreams Come True) 28. Ringo Shiina 29. Taeko Onuki 30. Ken Hirai Good list, but less solid because it only focuses on vocals and not overall artistry. Last edited by Uemarasan; 22nd October 2015 at 09:06 AM. |
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#35
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How about BEST FICTION, A BEST & DEEP RIVER?
edit: Siina Ringo - Strip In my opinion, iconic is definied by the niche the artist plays a role in. I would slo consider the first tommy february6 an iconic album for its sound. So is basicly SUITE CHIC. And many other albums i probably don't even know. The upcoming AKB48 best-of could be counted or one of the older Morning musume album to represent that group of artists. But you asked for solists, so yeah.
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awsome SET made by Foxxy_Fuyumi l ~**My HQ-MV CAP COLLECTION THRAD**~ l ~**My HQ-Audio Live Rip COLLECTION THRAD**~ Last edited by thinkingoutloud89; 22nd October 2015 at 10:49 AM. |
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#36
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Those are good albums, but I wouldn't say that tommyfebruary6 or Suite Chic are iconic albums. I take the word "iconic" to mean that we need more rigorous standards: highly influential, will be remembered in the future, and had strong commercial appeal. AKB48 will be there as will Morning Musume.
Namie: Sweet 19 Blues, possibly Concentration 20, Best Fiction. Utada: First Love, Distance, Deep River. Ayu: LOVEppears, A Best, possibly I Am. Ringo Shiina: possibly Muzai Moratorium, Shoso Strip. Misia: Mother Father Brother Sister, possibly Love is the Message. (influenced: Thelma Aoyama, Yuki Koyanagi, AI, Miliyah Kato, etc) Chitose Hajime: Hainumikaze. (crest of shima-uta wave: The Boom, Rikki, Rimi Natsukawa, Kosuke Atari, Last edited by Uemarasan; 22nd October 2015 at 05:13 PM. |
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#37
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You forgot Duty.
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#38
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Hmm, I wonder if Duty was really as iconic? I do love that album, but it seems to be more of a transitional album, a bridge between the sound of LOVEppears and the sound of I Am... I'd actually say that the Vogue-Far Away-Seasons trilogy was far more iconic than the actual album and was the sole reason the album sold as much as it did.
Maki Ohguro: Back Beats 1 Mariya Takeuchi: Request, Quiet Life, Impressions Nanase Aikawa: red, possibly paraDOX (influenced female J-rock, from Olivia to Anna Tsuchiya to Scandal to etc.) Last edited by Uemarasan; 26th October 2015 at 03:42 PM. |
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#39
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#40
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^That very well could be it^^
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