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After selecting the anthem's lyrics, Ōyama then asked Fenton to create the melody. After being given just two [13] to three weeks to compose the melody, and only a few days to rehearse, Fenton debuted the anthem before the Japanese Emperor in 1870. [12] This was the first version of "Kimigayo".
"Battōtai" (抜刀隊, Drawn-Sword Regiment) is a Japanese gunka composed by Charles Leroux with lyrics by Toyama Masakazu in 1877. Upon the request of the Japanese government, Leroux adapted it along with another gunka, "Fusōka" ( Song of Fusang ) , into the military march Japanese Army March [ ja ] in 1912.
Cozmez (stylized in all lowercase) is a duo consisting of the Yatonokami twins Kanata and Nayuta. Their songs are mainly trap music, with their lyrics often revolving around the hardships of their childhood and living in the slums. In 2021, Cozmez was declared the winning team of the original Paradox Live competition. [7]
Rage (also known as rage music, [1] [2] rage rap, [3] or rage beats [4] [5] [6]) is a microgenre of trap music. [3] [7] Distinguishing features of rage include short looping stereo-widened future bass-influenced synthesizer lead hooks and basic, energetic trap rhythms. [4] [7] [8] Among the pioneers of rage are rappers Playboi Carti, Lil Uzi ...
Winston Cook-Wilson called the song an "upbeat trap anthem featuring some unpredictable flows from the rapper and a catchy vocal sample". Future sings about his lifestyle of jewelry, lean and most notably, flying on a private jet. [2] [3]
T.I.'s 2001 song "Dope Boyz", from his debut album I'm Serious, includes the lyrics "the dope boyz in the trap nigga / the thug nigga, drug dealer where you at". [25] David Drake of Complex wrote that "the trap in the early 2000s wasn't a genre, it was a real place", and the term was later adopted to describe the "music made about that place". [26]
View a machine-translated version of the Japanese article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
"Ue o Muite Arukō" (Japanese: 上を向いて歩こう, "I Look Up as I Walk"), alternatively titled "Sukiyaki", is a song by Japanese crooner Kyu Sakamoto, first released in Japan in 1961. The song topped the charts in a number of countries, including the U.S. Billb