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SAKAMOTO, KYU LP SIGNED AUTOGRAPH SUKIYAKI ROCK N ROLL

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Dealer: Guaranteed Autographs
Contact: Al Radwill - Email Dealer
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Price: $99.99 USD  - Currency Converter

Shipping inside United States: Quoted at time of purchase
Shipping outside United States: Quoted at time of purchase

Description: THIS IS AN AUTHENTICALLY AUTOGRAPHED LP BY KYU SAKAMOTO.. KYU SAKAMOTO'S SUKIYAKI(CAPITOL T 10349)AND OTHER JAPANESE HITS. PHOTO COVER IS SIGNED BY KYU SAKAMOTO. TRACKS:SUKIYAKI,TSUN TSUN SONG, LONESOME TWO, KYU CHAN FOLK SONG MARCH, ITS JUST NOT THE REAL ME, GOOD TIMING, MY STAR, I COULDNT CARE FOR YOU, THE ZUNTATTA SONG, MY FIRST WHISKER, GOODBYE JOE, I WONDER WHAT HER NAME IS. CONDITION OF THE VINYL,COVER, AND AUTOGRAPH IS VG PLUS. His most popular song, Ue o muite arukō ("I look up when I walk") was popular in Japan and the United States. Released by Capitol Records in the US as Sukiyaki (Capitol 4945), it topped the Billboard pop charts in the United States for three weeks in 1963 -- to date the first and only song sung entirely in Japanese to do so. The lyrics were written by Rokusuke Ei and the melody was composed by Hachidai Nakamura. The lyrics tell the story of a man who looks up and whistles while he is walking so that his tears won't fall. The verses of the song describe him doing this through each season of the year. The original Japanese title was considered too difficult for American audiences to remember and pronounce, therefore a word that people could associate with Japan (and was simple) was used - Sukiyaki, even though the word does not actually appear in the song. In the UK, it was the first ever Japanese language song to enter the charts, under the American assumed title "Sukiyaki". However it only went to number 6 with no further chart entries. The actual word "Sukiyaki" refers to a popular Japanese dish usually containing beef and vegetables simmered in a pot containing water and sauce. Nothing to do with love songs or anything like that at all. So this is really a sort of mockery of the song, yet despite this it was still successful with non-Japanese speaking audiences. The song was performed in English by the female R&B duo A Taste of Honey in 1981; the English version, which also told the story of a love gone wrong, was almost as big a hit as the original, reaching #3 on the Hot 100 and remaining on the Hot 100 chart for 24 weeks. "Sukiyaki" was brought back into the U.S. Top 10 once more by the R&B vocal group 4 P.M. (4 Positive Music) in 1994. In 2000, solo violinist Diana Yukawa recorded Sukiyaki song on her bestselling debut album (known as Elegy in the UK and La Campanella in Japan). Diana also performed Sukiyaki various time on the mountainside where her father, Akihisa Yukawa, died in the Japan Airlines Flight 123 crash together with Sakamoto. The English lyrics of the version recorded by A Taste of Honey are not a translation of the original Japanese lyrics but a completely different set of lyrics set to the same basic melody. Sakamoto had only one other song reach the U.S. charts, "China Nights (Shina no Yoru)" (Capitol 5016), which peaked at #58 in 1963. His only American album, "Sukiyaki and Other Japanese Hits" (Capitol 10349), peaked at #14 on the Billboard Pop Albums chart (now known as the Billboard 200) in 1963 and remained on the Pop Albums chart for 17 weeks. In the summer of 1963 Kyu went out on a world tour that lasted to the beginning of 1964. A few of the countries that he visited included the United States (including Hawaii), Germany, and Sweden. When Sakamoto visited the United States he was a guest on The Tonight Show with Steve Allen, he was supposed to be on The Ed Sullivan Show but it was cancelled due to the recording of his upcoming movie "Kyu chan no katana wo uite"
Status: For Sale Reference#: sakyulpsiaus
Condition: See Description Year: See Description


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