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The Ode of Showa Restoration (昭和維新 ( しょうわいしん ) の 歌 ( うた ), shōwaishin no uta) is a 1930 song by Japanese naval officer Mikami Taku.It was composed as an anthem for the Young Officers Movement.
The first verse of the song. Hotaru no Hikari (蛍の光, meaning "Glow of a firefly") is a Japanese song incorporating the tune of Scottish folk song Auld Lang Syne with completely different lyrics by Chikai Inagaki, first introduced in a collection of singing songs for elementary school students in 1881 (Meiji 14).
The Japanese version was originally included on IU's first Japanese extended play I U, released on December 14, 2011, before being released on March 21, 2012, as IU's first single album Good Day. "Good Day" received generally positive reviews by music critics. Billboard magazine crowned it as the best K-pop song released in the 2010s.
Kunrei-shiki romanization (Japanese: 訓令式ローマ字, Hepburn: Kunrei-shiki rōmaji), also known as the Monbusho system (named after the endonym for the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology) or MEXT system, [1] is the Cabinet-ordered romanization system for transcribing the Japanese language into the Latin alphabet.
"Every day is a good day" Nichinichi kore kōnichi (Japanese: 日々是好日) (Chinese: 日日是好日) is a Zen Buddhist proverb. It is thought to be Yunmen Wenyan's answer in the sixth case of the kōan collection Blue Cliff Record.
[4] [5] The title of the song "Mō Sukoshi Dake" was announced on March 29, and used as a theme for the morning show for one year since the same day. [3] The full song was first aired on May 4 on their radio show Yoasobi's All Night Nippon X and released officially on May 10 to digital music and streaming platforms. [6]
"Week End" is 4 minutes and 30 seconds long. [13] The song was written, arranged, and produced by Hoshino, who also provided vocals and handclapping.It features Ryosuke Nagaoka on electric guitar, Hama Okamoto on bass, Hajime Kobayashi on Wurlitzer piano, Noriyasu Kawamura on drums and cowbell, and Eiko Ishibashi on synthesizer and background vocals.
"Victory Day" (Russian: День Победы) ranks among the most popular in the large corpus of Russian songs devoted to the Second World War. The song refers to the Victory Day celebration and differs from most of these by its cheerful intonations of a marching song and by the fact that it was composed by David Tukhmanov thirty years after ...