Rimi Natsukawa
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Rimi Natsukawa | |
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Native name | 夏川りみ |
Born | Rimi Kaneku (兼久りみ) October 9, 1973 Ishigaki, Okinawa, Japan |
Other names | Misato Hoshi (星美里), Rimi Tamaki (玉木りみ) (married name) |
Occupation | Singer |
Years active | 1989–1992, 1999-present |
Website | www |
Musical career | |
Genres | J-pop, folk, Yaeyama folk song, Enka |
Labels | Pony Canyon (1989–1992) Victor Entertainment (1999-) |
Associated acts | Andrea Bocelli, Begin, The Gospellers, Shoukichi Kina, Kiroro, Kobukuro, Misako Koja, Parsha Club, Noriyuki Makihara, Kazufumi Miyazawa, Ryoko Moriyama, Yasukatsu Ōjima, Shinji Tanimura, Chuei Yoshikawa |
Rimi Natsukawa (夏川 りみ Natsukawa Rimi?, born 9 October 1973) is an Okinawan singer. She is best known for her 2001 single "Nada Sōsō."
Contents
Childhood
Natsukawa was born in Ishigaki, the largest city in the Yaeyama Islands chain. From a young age she enjoyed singing, and wanted to be a singer after hearing her father sing Yaeyama folk songs, such as "Tsuki nu Kaisha" (月ぬ美しゃ Beauty of the Moon?) and "Densaa Bushi" (デンサー節 Tradition Song?).[1][2] From age 7, she practiced two hours a day with her father to become an enka singer. At 9, she won a local singing contest (the Chibikko Nodo Jiman Daikai (ちびっこのど自慢大会 Our Tiny Kids' Throats Competition?)). Natsukawa continued to win competitions, and in 1984 won the MBS TV show Shirōto Meiji-kai (素人名人会 Amateur Master Meet?)'s grand prize. In 1986, she won the Nagasaki Kayōsai (長崎歌謡祭 Nagasaki Song Festival?)'s grand prize, and was the youngest person to win this prize at the time.[1]
Pony Canyon debut
Natsukawa, by chance, was scouted shortly after winning the competition at 13 years old.[1] She moved to Tokyo, and started preparing for her debut. She debuted later in 1989 as an enka singer with the name "Misato Hoshi," under Pony Canyon. She released three singles in three years, and did not find much success.
Natsukawa felt defeated after this, and after living for four years in Tokyo, she moved back to Okinawa. She lived with her older sister in Naha,[2] and helped out in her restaurant, singing for patrons daily.[1] As patrons would travel quite a distance to hear her sing, she gradually regained her desire to be a singer.
In 1998, she appeared on an Okinawan radio show called Iwa-chan no Vitamin Radio (岩ちゃんのビタミンラジオ Rocky's Vitamin Radio?) as an assistant.
Re-debut
Natsukawa's musical director from her Pony Canyon days decided to set up a music production company for her, and in 1999 asked if she could return to the capital. She was soon signed under Victor Entertainment, and re-debuted with the single "Yūbae ni Yurete" (夕映えにゆれて Swaying in the Sunset?). She was finding similar success to her debut, as neither of her first singles charted. While watching the news broadcast of the 26th G8 summit held in Okinawa, Natsukawa watched a performance of Okinawan folk band Begin perform a song called "Nada Sōsō." She found she could not get it out of her head, and requested that she could cover the song backstage at a Begin concert.[3] The song was released as her third single in March 2001.
Very slowly and steadily, the song started gaining popularity. It was a hit on Okinawan radio, and in May 2002 (over a year since its release) it first charted in the Oricon top 100 singles charts. Natsukawa released an EP of Okinawan cover songs, Minamikaze, in May, adding to the momentum. By June, the single had broken the top 50, and by July the top 20.[4] Her debut album Tida: Tida Kaji nu Umui was released in September. Natsukawa was asked to perform the song at the 2002 Kōhaku Uta Gassen (New Year's song competition), which made the song break the top 10.
None of these three releases charted very highly, but they all charted extremely gradually. By the time Tida: Tida Kaji nu Umui and Minamikaze stopped charting (roughly two years later), they had sold 280,000/371,000 copies respectively. "Nada Sōsō" stopped charting a total of six years after its release, and sold over 680,000 copies.[4]
Natsukawa released a string of Okinawan song-based released from this time until 2004. One of these, "Warabigami (Yamatoguchi)" (童神~ヤマトグチ~ Little God (Standard Japanese)?) (a Misako Koja cover), was nominated for the Japan Record Award. It was Natsukawa's biggest hit since Nada Sōsō, reaching the top 20.[4]
Original song move
In 2004, Natsukawa's music changed to centre more around original songs, with her third album Kaze no Michi (her second, Sora no Keshiki, featured many original songs, but still centred on Okinawan folk songs). She started a trend in her music for collaborating with high profile musicians (Kazufumi Miyazawa, The Gospellers). Her 2005 follow-up, Ayakaji no Ne, was similar, with Kentarō Kobuchi of Kobukuro writing her single "Sayōnara Arigatō" (さようなら ありがとう Good-Bye, Thank You?). Natsukawa's releases began dropping in sales, with "Sayōnara Arigatō" being her most recent top 50 single, with its 2006 re-release.[4]
In 2006, she released a compilation album, Rimi Natsukawa Selection, that was only for release in non-Japanese Asian countries. The album was a massive success in Taiwan, reaching #1 on the Taiwanese album charts.[5]
In 2007, Natsukawa ended her contract with her production office.[6] She continued to release music under Victor, however, such as her 5th album Umui Kaji.
Song Search
At Natsukawa's concerts and at her website, she began asking for submissions from fans for songs they would like to hear her cover.[7] The result of this was the "Uta Sagashi" (歌さがし Song Search?) project, where Natsukawa worked on covering mainly Japanese popular songs. This resulted in the album Uta Sagashi: Request Cover Album, her most successful release of her material since 2003.[4]
Since this, Natsukawa has continued to release original material and compilations. Her second Uta Sagashi album was released in February 2010, and is her first bilingual Japanese/Chinese album.[8]
Personal life
Natsukawa married percussionist Masaaki Tamaki (玉木正昭) on January 1, 2009.[9] Their first child, a boy, was born on August 20, 2010.[10]
Discography
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Studio albums
Cover albums
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Compilation albums |
Top 50 singles
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (subscription only)
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 夏川りみ事務所独立&休養を告白…見つめ直したい - ZAKZAK
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 歌手の夏川りみさん、元日に結婚…パーカッション演奏家と (Singer Natsukawa Rimi will marry on New Year's... to percussionist). Yomiuri Shimbun. 28 December 2008. Accessed 30 December 2008.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Official website (Japanese)
- Official Victor Site (Japanese)
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- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Pages with broken file links
- Official website not in Wikidata
- Articles with Japanese-language external links
- 1973 births
- Living people
- Japanese musicians
- Japanese female singers
- Japanese-language singers
- People from Okinawa Prefecture
- Musicians from Okinawa Prefecture