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"Get You" is a song by Canadian singer and songwriter Daniel Caesar, featuring Colombian-American singer and songwriter Kali Uchis. It was released on October 20, 2016, as the lead single from Caesar's debut studio album, Freudian (2017), with the b-side, "Japanese Denim".
List of songs written or co-written for other artists, showing year released and album name Title Year Artist Album "Suburbia (Heaven Or)" 2017 Sean Leon: I Think You've Gone Mad (Or the Sins of the Father) "Telling the Truth" (featuring Kaytranada) Mary J. Blige: Strength of a Woman "Broken Clocks" SZA: Ctrl "Saturn" (featuring Kwabs) 2018 Nao ...
Big John is a casual clothing manufacturer founded by Kotaro Ozaki (尾崎小太郎) in Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture. [1] Originally named Maruo Hifuku (マルオ被服), [2] it was the first company in Japan to manufacture jeans domestically, and so has been called "the godfather of Japanese denim brands".
"Hai Yorokonde" went viral on social media in Japan shortly after its release along with its music video, which has amassed over 100 million views on YouTube. The song topped the Billboard Japan Heatseekers Songs, [ 3 ] and subsequently peaked at number four on the Japan Hot 100 [ 4 ] and number two on the Global Japan Songs Excl. Japan . [ 5 ]
East End × Yuri (pronounced “East End Plus Yuri”) is a Japanese hip hop group that was composed of East End and singer Yuri Ichii, ex-member of J-pop girl group Tokyo Performance Doll. They were the first Japanese hip-hop artists to have a single sell over a million copies in Japan. A feat achieved twice with the singles "DA.YO.NE" and ...
Classical music in Japan (13 C, 3 P) Japanese country music (1 C) E. Enka (3 C, 1 P) Eurobeat (2 C, 4 P) F. Japanese folk music (6 C, 13 P) G. ... Footwork (genre ...
Shibuya-kei (Japanese: 渋谷系, lit. "Shibuya style") is a microgenre [7] of pop music [1] or a general aesthetic [8] that flourished in Japan in the mid-to-late 1990s. [3] The music genre is distinguished by a "cut-and-paste" approach that was inspired by the kitsch, fusion, and artifice from certain music styles of the past. [9]
Keiko Fuji debuted in 1969 and the music genre like her songs was called enka, which was like Japanese traditional music. In 1969, Japanese child singer Osamu Minagawa made the Japanese Oricon weekly number-one single "Kuroneko no Tango" at the age of only six, establishing the still-standing youngest record to top the Oricon single charts.