酒は涙か溜息か
Ichirō Fujiyama (藤山 一郎, Fujiyama Ichirō; April 8, 1911 – August 21, 1993), born Takeo Masunaga (増永 丈夫, Masunaga Takeo), was a Japanese singer and composer, known for his contribution to Japanese popular music called ryūkōka by his Western classical music skills. He was born in Chūō, Tokyo, and graduated from the Tokyo Music School. Although he was regarded as a tenor singer in Japanese popular music, he was originally a classical baritone singer. He also acted in various films, and was a close friend of Minoru Matsuya (1910–1995). His workroom has been reproduced inside the NHK museum of broadcasting as an exhibit. Fujiyama was born Takeo Masunaga in a store in Nihonbashi. He entered the Tokyo Music School and learned Western musical theory under German-born musician Klaus Pringsheim Sr. However, his home had the debt because of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. In April 1929, after graduating from Keio Futsubu School, Fujiyama entered the vocal music department of the Tokyo Music School (later to become Tokyo University of the Arts), the only government-run music school in Japan at the time. During this period, there was a strong social tendency to believe that music and dancing were primarily for women, and Fujiyama was the only male student admitted to the vocal music department. When asked why he wanted to pursue a career in music during the school's entrance examination interview, Fujiyama replied that he wished to become an opera singer. As ryūkōka singer Ichirō Fujiyama, he signed with Nippon Columbia, though singing ryūkōka was a taboo for his school. Meeting composer Masao Koga, he debuted with song Camp Kouta. Fujiyama and Koga also recorded Sake wa Namida ka Tameiki ka. The song was released and became a big hit in 1931. One theory holds that Sake wa Namida ka Tameiki ka sold more than one million copies. Although Fujiyama immediately became a big star of Japan, his school was very angry and he was once forced to suspend his musical career. In 1933, he graduated from the school and signed with JVC. He released songs such as Moeru Gojinka and Cheerio! The songs were composed by Shinpei Nakayama and Kunihiko Hashimoto respectively. Further to Japanese popular songs, he sang the Western popular songs. For example, he sang I Kiss Your Hand, Madame under its alternative title Koi no Hanataba (恋の花束, lit. Love Flower Bouquet). He moved to Teichiku Records and then Columbia. During World War II, he also sang gunka such as Moyuru ōzora, which was composed by Kosaku Yamada. However, he was taken prisoner in Indonesia when the war ended. After he returned to Japan, he released a string of hits such as Aoi Sanmyaku and Nagasaki no Kane, which were composed by Ryoichi Hattori and Yuji Koseki respectively. Fujiyama retired from Japanese popular music in 1954 when he moved to NHK. However, he had been known as a conductor for the Kōhaku Uta Gassen's Hotaru no Hikari until his death. He also composed various school songs for Japanese schools. In 1989, when Emperor Shōwa died, his song Aoi Sanmyaku unanticipatedly reached the top in the NHK Top 200 Japanese memorial song rankings of the Shōwa period. He was awarded the People's Honour Award in 1992 and died in 1993. At the 60th NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen in 2009, Aoi Sanmyaku was sung by NYC Boys as a part of medley Kōhaku 60th Anniversary NYC Special (紅白60回記念NYCスペシャル, Kōhaku Rokujukkai Kinen Enuwaishī Supesharu) along with NYC and Yūki 100% (theme of Nintama Rantarō). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Ichirō Fujiyama (藤山 一郎, Fujiyama Ichirō; April 8, 1911 – August 21, 1993), born Takeo Masunaga (増永 丈夫, Masunaga Takeo), was a Japanese singer and composer, known for his contribution to Japanese popular music called ryūkōka by his Western classical music skills. He was born in Chūō, Tokyo, and graduated from the Tokyo Music School. Although he was regarded as a tenor singer in Japanese popular music, he was originally a classical baritone singer. He also acted in various films, and was a close friend of Minoru Matsuya (1910–1995). His workroom has been reproduced inside the NHK museum of broadcasting as an exhibit. Fujiyama was born Takeo Masunaga in a store in Nihonbashi. He entered the Tokyo Music School and learned Western musical theory under German-born musician Klaus Pringsheim Sr. However, his home had the debt because of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. In April 1929, after graduating from Keio Futsubu School, Fujiyama entered the vocal music department of the Tokyo Music School (later to become Tokyo University of the Arts), the only government-run music school in Japan at the time. During this period, there was a strong social tendency to believe that music and dancing were primarily for women, and Fujiyama was the only male student admitted to the vocal music department. When asked why he wanted to pursue a career in music during the school's entrance examination interview, Fujiyama replied that he wished to become an opera singer. As ryūkōka singer Ichirō Fujiyama, he signed with Nippon Columbia, though singing ryūkōka was a taboo for his school. Meeting composer Masao Koga, he debuted with song Camp Kouta. Fujiyama and Koga also recorded Sake wa Namida ka Tameiki ka. The song was released and became a big hit in 1931. One theory holds that Sake wa Namida ka Tameiki ka sold more than one million copies. Although Fujiyama immediately became a big star of Japan, his school was very angry and he was once forced to suspend his musical career. In 1933, he graduated from the school and signed with JVC. He released songs such as Moeru Gojinka and Cheerio! The songs were composed by Shinpei Nakayama and Kunihiko Hashimoto respectively. Further to Japanese popular songs, he sang the Western popular songs. For example, he sang I Kiss Your Hand, Madame under its alternative title Koi no Hanataba (恋の花束, lit. Love Flower Bouquet). He moved to Teichiku Records and then Columbia. During World War II, he also sang gunka such as Moyuru ōzora, which was composed by Kosaku Yamada. However, he was taken prisoner in Indonesia when the war ended. After he returned to Japan, he released a string of hits such as Aoi Sanmyaku and Nagasaki no Kane, which were composed by Ryoichi Hattori and Yuji Koseki respectively. Fujiyama retired from Japanese popular music in 1954 when he moved to NHK. However, he had been known as a conductor for the Kōhaku Uta Gassen's Hotaru no Hikari until his death. He also composed various school songs for Japanese schools. In 1989, when Emperor Shōwa died, his song Aoi Sanmyaku unanticipatedly reached the top in the NHK Top 200 Japanese memorial song rankings of the Shōwa period. He was awarded the People's Honour Award in 1992 and died in 1993. At the 60th NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen in 2009, Aoi Sanmyaku was sung by NYC Boys as a part of medley Kōhaku 60th Anniversary NYC Special (紅白60回記念NYCスペシャル, Kōhaku Rokujukkai Kinen Enuwaishī Supesharu) along with NYC and Yūki 100% (theme of Nintama Rantarō). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
長崎の鐘
青い山脈
丘を越えて
影を慕いて
東京ラプソディ
酒は涙か溜息か
夢淡き東京
青い背広で
男の純情
青春日記
燃える御神火
ニコライの鐘
ラジオ体操の歌
丘は花ざかり
山のかなたに
三日月娘
懐かしのボレロ
東京ラプソディー
なつかしの歌声
燃ゆる大空
東京娘
ゆらりろの唄
キャンプ小唄
銀座セレナーデ
決戦の大空へ
浅草の唄
空の神兵
花の素顔
回想譜
白虎隊
荒城の月
君が代
白鳥の歌
英国東洋艦隊潰滅
僕の青春
愛国行進曲
夏の思い出
カスタネット・タンゴ
太平洋行進曲
夏は来ぬ
Furusato no Oo ka
スキーの唄
Konjikiyasha
崑崙越えて
カスタネット タンゴ
春よいずこ
さらば青春
みどりの雨
Moeru Gojinka
この道
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