I got a stupid [Japanese song] stuck in my head recently and need help finding out the title. It was featured in a music video shown on the ["Abroad in Japan"] YouTube channel with [Chris Broad]. Definitely annoys him, need to see for myself. I'll link the video below, skip to about 3:20 for the song. Thanks

is my go-to website for song lyrics! They even have a toggle to display between furigana or romaji, or to just turn them off completely using that site. I usually do a search using  utaten and can usually find what I want on UtaTen


Japanese Song Download


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What Japanese song make you cry?2018/12/7 15:58 I kind of really like Japanese sad songs. I have found Kimi Dattara of Happy Birthday. I have to admit I cry a little bit when I read that song's lyric. You can try!

Anyway, give me more sad songs, please!!!by minhnt0706

Re: What Japanese song make you cry?2018/12/8 11:21 Thanks for your beautiful songs. Some of them really get my tears, so embarrassing.

If you guys want to listen to Kimi Dattara of Happy Birthday, click here: -dattara-happy-birthday-with-full-ly...

And Hotaru of Fujita Maiko: -fujita-maiko-with-full-lyric-and-...by minhnt0706rate this post as useful

Re: What Japanese song make you cry?2018/12/10 12:46 I just found this Japanese sad song list. You guys really should try it.

 -japanese-sad-songs-can-make-you-cry...by minhnt0706rate this post as useful

I am encountering an issue where some songs are being auto translated into English, when I would prefer for them to be in their orignal language (Japanese). If I were to search that artist via Google, I am able to correctly get the Japanese titles to show in the web app. If I then favourite a song from the web app, I'm able to see the Japanese title reflected on the Desktop App.

Not only does this make identifying songs harder, in some cases, I have duplicated songs that have been liked, as I initially liked them when the titles were in Japanese, then liked them again when the auto-translation feature was implemented. I've added an example where I have favourited two identical albums, one in Japanese, one in English.

I can see the exact same thing occuring on my phone as well. If I favourite an album already in Japanese, after finding it from Google, then those songs show up in Japanese. But just browsing by artist to find this exact same album, it shows up auto-translated.

"Idol" (, Aidoru) is a song by Japanese duo Yoasobi from their third extended play, The Book 3 (2023). The song was released on April 12, 2023, through Sony Music Entertainment Japan, served as the opening theme of the Japanese anime series Oshi no Ko. Written by Ayase and based on Aka Akasaka's short story "45510", "Idol" is a pop track with hip-hop elements, depicting the two-faced nature of a star in the Japanese idol industry, as well as perspectives on the anime's character Ai Hoshino from her fans, her B-Komachi's bandmates, and herself. Naoya Nakayama directed the accompanying animated music video for the song, which premiered on April 13 and exceeded 100 million views in a month, the fastest among Japanese acts.

Music critics praised the song as a "perfect" representation of Ai Hoshino. Commercially, one of Yoasobi's most successful songs, "Idol" topped the Oricon Combined Singles Chart and Billboard Japan Hot 100, the latter for 21 consecutive weeks, the longest-running number-one song in the chart history, and the 2023 year-end number-one song. The song became the highest charted Japanese act on the Billboard Global 200 at number seven, and the first Japanese-language song to top the Global Excl. US. "Idol" broke the record for the fastest song to earn 500 million streams in Japan within 28 weeks and was certified platinum for downloads and triple platinum for streaming by the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ). The song won Best Animation Video and Song of the Year from the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards Japan.

An anime adaptation of manga series Oshi no Ko was announced in June 2022.[1] During a livestream on its official YouTube channel on February 19, 2023, the anime series revealed the opening theme which would be performed by Yoasobi, titled "Idol".[2] As a "super huge" fan of the manga, Ayase had personally read Oshi no Ko before and written a demo about it in around 2022. It was initially titled "Kykyoku no gi" (, lit. 'Ultimate Secret Techniques'), portraying a girl who is the strongest and unbeatable fighter, showing some dark side, reminiscing about Street Fighter character Chun-Li.[3] The demo was originally expected to release as a Vocaloid song,[4] but the plan was changed after the duo received the offer to perform the opening theme; Ayase interwove the demo and the new composition to be the final version.[5]

"Idol" first featured in the anime's trailer, and the full-length version played for the first time in an extended 90-minute first episode, "Mother and Children", which premiered on March 17 at selected movie theaters in Japan.[6] After the debut show of their Denksekka Arena Tour on April 5 at Nippon Gaishi Hall, Nagoya, where they first perform the song, Yoasobi announced that "Idol" would be available on digital music and streaming platforms on April 12, the same date as the anime's televised premiere.[7] A month later, the duo teased a snippet of the English version via video clip uploaded via Twitter, showing Ikura during recording the song in the studio,[8] and later released digitally on May 26.[9] The limited CD single and 7-inch formats of the song was released on June 21, and July 26, respectively.[10][11] Subsequently, "Idol" was included on the duo's third extended play The Book 3, released on October 4.[12]

"Idol" is a pop track based on hip-hop elements with church choir-like gothic rendition.[15][16] The Japan Times's Patrick St. Michel described the song as "a mix of varied influences that draws from Akihabara livehouses and Atlanta hip-hop," that "connected by a piano dash that has come to define Ayase's production."[17] It is driven by the "bright and poppy", "idol-like bubblegum",[15] and "reign of king" atmosphere-like sounds,[18] and includes "dizzying" transitions and "complicated" structure, such as "gritty" sub bass, orchestral and electronic-sounded chorus, and trap beat-styled rapping etc.[19][20] The production was inspired by Ghostemane's strong lows and bass guitar played at Indonesia rapper Rich Brian's performance.[21] Writing for Shkan Bunshun, Hwang Sun-up noted about the song "reflecting a lot of K-Pop elements" in the terms of both sound and composition, citing Blackpink's "How You Like That" for grand intro, and Nmixx's "O.O" for mixed structure.[22] JX Soo from NME described Ikura's vocals in "Idol" as "cutest idol in the world"-like "sweet and clear" voice, with "deep sarcastic" snarls and "K-pop-esque" "rapid-fire" raps.[20]

"Idol" features uncredited background cheering shouts by Akihabara-based B-boy group and YouTuber Real Akiba Boyz, and gospel-styled background vocals sang in English, for praising idol.[23] Told only until the end of Oshi no Ko's first episode,[21] the lyrics expresses the two-faced nature of people in the entertainment industry, specifically Japanese idols,[24] including their perfection, ultimate, culture, fans' psychology, and idolatry.[18] The song shows the three perspectives on Ai Hoshino. The first part expresses the eyes of fans and media about her perfection and making herself look mysterious, by answering fans' questions, and herself about not knowing how to love someone and no longer distinguishing between truths and lies. The second part tells B-Komachi's members' jealousy but respect and gratitude for Hoshino. The last depicts Hoshino's point of view of her secret about lies, greed, and imperfection, as well as her motherhood of twin children, Ruby and Aqua, that she hopes someday her lies become true.[25]

["Idol"] only depicts the story up to the end of [Oshi no Ko's] first episode. I thought that if the opening theme song was always one about what Ai was thinking when she was alive, what happened to her, and her love for Aqua and Ruby, that people would never forget about Ai, and she would become a legend.

The "Idol" music video became the duo's fourth music video to accrue 100 million views, after "Yoru ni Kakeru", "Kaibutsu", and "Gunj", as well as the fastest music video to reach this mark by any Japanese act within 35 days,[48] surpassing the 62 days of NiziU's "Make You Happy".[49] As of October, the music video has gained 300 million views,[50] and became the 2023 most-viewed music-related video on YouTube in Japan.[51] The English version's music video was released later in conjunction with the song on May 26.[52]

According to Oricon and Billboard Japan, "Idol" became the fastest song to reach 100 million streams in Japan within five weeks, surpassing six weeks of Official Hige Dandism's "Subtitle" and BTS' "Butter".[53][54] It also broke records for the fastest song to earn 200, 300, 400, and 500 million streams.[B][C] As of September 2023, the song received platinum certification for digital sales and triple platinum for streaming from the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ), exceeding 250,000 downloads and 300 million streams, respectively.[57][58]

For the issue dated April 24, 2023, "Idol" entered the Oricon Digital Singles Chart at number two, earning 33,867 downloads, behind Man with a Mission and Milet's "Kizuna no Kiseki",[59] and rose up to the top the next week with 34,070 downloads, making it as Yoasobi's record for the most number-one song on the chart with 12 songs, tying with Kenshi Yonezu at that time.[60][D] It spent ten non-consecutive weeks atop the Digital Singles Chart, the fifth songs to reach it in history.[E] The song debuted atop the Streaming Chart with 10,328,178 streams, the duo's third number-one song on the chart after "Yoru ni Kakeru", and "Kaibutsu",[63] and topped for 22 consecutive weeks, the second most weeks at number one,[64] behind Official Hige Dandism's "Pretender" (34),[65] and the fifth song to reach number one on the chart for more than ten weeks.[F] With 29,975,897 streams in the week of June 26, the song became the duo's and 2023 biggest, and the second most accumulated streams in a single week in Oricon history, blocked from "Butter" (31 million streams),[60][66] as well as the song with the most weeks exceeding 20 million streams (12),[67] besting "Subtitle" (4).[53] e24fc04721

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