- Miwa (singer)
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Miwa Born 15 June 1990 Origin Hayama, Kanagawa Genres Pop Occupations Singer-songwriter, radio DJ Instruments Guitar, electric guitar, piano[1] Years active 2007–present Labels Sony Music Entertainment Japan (2010-present) Website miwa-web.com Notable instruments Gibson J-45
Joan Jett Model Gibson Melody MakerMiwa (stylised as miwa) is a Japanese singer-songwriter. She debuted in 2010 with the single "Don't Cry Anymore", used as the theme song for the drama Nakanai to Kimeta hi.
Contents
Biography
Miwa was born in Hayama, Kanagawa, however moved to Tokyo at a young age. Since her father had a great love for a music, Miwa naturally began to enjoy music as she grew up.[2][3]
Miwa began writing songs at 15. She started self-learning how to play the guitar after she entered high school, but gave up and paid for professional lessons after finding she could not make a lot of progress learning by herself.[4] Her High School had a ban on students having part-time jobs. Despite this, Miwa secretly worked, and eventually used these savings by her second year of high school to buy a Gibson J-45 guitar.[2][4] After this, Miwa played live concerts mostly around Shimokitazawa in Tokyo and in Okinawa in the summer (her parents had a house there). Due to her high school also having a ban on students working in the entertainment business, she had to do these lives in secret (without even telling her school friends). In this time, Miwa released two self-published independent singles, "Song for You/Today" and "Soba ni Itai Kara" in 2007 and 2008.[5]
Miwa was signed to Sony Music Entertainment Japan during her third year of high school.[2] She debuted as an artist in 2010, while attending Keio University.[6] Her debut single, "Don't Cry Anymore," was chosen to be used for the drama Nakanai to Kimeta Hi's theme song.[6] The single was a minor commercial success, breaking the top 20 on Oricon's single charts and being certified by the RIAJ as selling 100,000 full length cellphone downloads a month after its release.[7][8] In April 2010, the song won the award for best drama theme song at the 64th The Television Drama Academy Awards, beating out songs such as Arashi's "Troublemaker" and Mr. Children's "Hanabi."[9]
Miwa released her second single, "Little Girl," in late June.[10] Her third single, "Change," was the twelfth opening theme song for the anime Bleach,[11] and was a top 10 single.[12]
For the animated film adaptation of Eto Mori's novel Colorful, Miwa covered two songs by famous Japanese artists. Yutaka Ozaki's "Boku ga Boku de Aru Tame ni" was used as the film's image song, and The Blue Hearts' song "Aozora" was used as the ending theme song of the film. Both songs were released as digital downloads on August 12, 2010.[13]
Miwa considers her favourite Western musicians to be Sheryl Crow, Deep Purple, Carole King, Avril Lavigne and Taylor Swift.[3] Her favourite Japanese musicians are Aiko, Angela Aki, Radwimps and Yuki.[14][15]
Miwa previously DJed a monthly radio show on All Night Nippon, Miwa no All Night Nippon R (miwaのオールナイトニッポンR), every third Monday from 3:00am to 5:00am.[16] It has since then been changed into a weekly show, now known as Miwa no All Night Nippon (miwaのオールナイトニッポン), airing every Tuesday (early Wednesday) from 1:00am to 3:00am.[17]
Miwa released her first album Guitarissimo on April 6, 2011 (was scheduled to release a week earlier on end of March but was delayed due to the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and its aftereffects). The charts performance was Miwa's best overall: the album reached No. 1 in the Oricon's album charts, making Miwa the first Heisei period-born solo singer to reach a No. 1 on the album charts in the history of the Oricon.[18]
Discography
Album
Year Album Information Oricon
albums
charts
[7]Reported
sales
[7]2011 guitarissimo - Released: April 6, 2011
- Label: Sony (SRCL-7599)
- Formats: Compact disc, digital download, rental CD
1 66,000 Major label singles
Release Title Notes Chart positions Oricon
sales
[7]Album Oricon singles charts
[7]Billboard Japan Hot 100
[19]RIAJ digital tracks
[20]2010 "don't cry anymore" Gold certification for full-length cellphone downloads[8] 11 2 3 22,000 guitarissimo "Little Girl" 18 84 59 8,200 "chAngE" 8 12 4 20,000 "Otoshimono" 14 39 19 18,000 2011 "Haru ni Nattara" (春になったら , "When It Becomes Spring") 10 22 12 16,000 "441" 7 11 21 21,000 TBA "FRiDAY-MA-MAGiC" 9 15 Other released songs
Release Title Notes Chart positions Album Billboard Japan Hot 100
[19]RIAJ digital tracks
[20]2007 "Song for You/Today" Self-released independent singles — — — 2008 "Soba ni Itai Kara" (そばにいたいから , "Because I Want to Be Near You") — — 2010 "Boku ga Boku de Aru Tame ni" (僕が僕であるために , "For Me to Be Me") Digital download, Yutaka Ozaki cover — 42 "Aozora" (青空 , "Blue Skies") Digital download, The Blue Hearts cover — — "Haru ni Nattara" (single) 2011 "Kitakaze (Kimi ni Todokimasu Yō ni)" (北風 ~君にとどきますように~ , "North Wind (I Wish for This to Reach You)") Noriyuki Makihara cover 99 — We Love Mackey "Chasing Hearts" — 60 "441" (single) References
- ^ Go!Go! Guitar (April 2010). Interview Miwa. 13. Yamaha Music Media. pp. 16.
- ^ a b c Miwa Official Website. "バイオグラフィ" (in Japanese). http://www.miwa-web.com/bio/. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ a b MUSICSHELF (2010-03-02). "miwa Special Interview" (in Japanese). http://musicshelf.jp/blog/selector/2010/03/miwa-special-interview.html. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ a b mFound entertainment (2010-03-24). "miwa スペシャル・インタビュー" (in Japanese). http://mfound.jp/interview/miwa.html. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ MOD'S SHOP. "Miwa" (in Japanese). http://modsshop.jp/miwa.html. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ a b BARKS (2010-01-17). "慶応大学在学中の19歳miwa、ドラマ主題歌で鮮烈デビュー" (in Japanese). http://www.barks.jp/news/?id=1000057385. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ a b c d e "オリコンランキング情報サービス「you大樹」". Oricon. http://ranking.oricon.co.jp. Retrieved May 10, 2011. (subscription only)
- ^ a b "レコード協会調べ 3月度有料音楽配信認定 <略称:3月度認定>" (in Japanese). RIAJ. 2010-04-22. http://www.riaj.or.jp/data/others/chart/w100420.html. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ Web The Television (2010-04-21). "ドラマアカデミー賞: 【第64回 ドラマソング賞】". http://blog.television.co.jp/drama/academy/2010/04/dont_cry_anymoremiwa.html#more. Retrieved 2010-07-21.
- ^ BARKS (2010-04-28). "miwa、セカンドシングル「リトルガール」は6月発売" (in Japanese). http://news.livedoor.com/article/detail/4745055/. Retrieved 2010-04-30.[dead link]
- ^ Oricon Style (2010-04-28). "アニメ&主題歌特集『1日の原動力はやっぱりアニメ!2010年春 注目のアニメ&主題歌』" (in Japanese). http://www.oricon.co.jp/music/special/2010/anime0428/. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ Oricon. "chAngE(初回生産限定盤) - miwa" (in Japanese). http://ranking.oricon.co.jp/free_contents/search/detail.asp?itemcd=880452&samecd=1. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ^ Barks (2010-07-03). "miwa、尾崎豊とブルハのカバーを映画『カラフル』に提供" (in Japanese). http://www.barks.jp/news/?id=1000062403. Retrieved 2010-07-21.
- ^ Musicshelf (2010-03-02). "朝起きた時に聴きたい曲". http://musicshelf.jp/playlist/964484. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ Miwa's All Night Nippon R (miwaのオールナイトニッポンR). Nippon Broadcasting System. Tokyo, 2010-04-17, 2010-05-15.
- ^ Tristone (2010-03-24). "ニッポン放送「オールナイトニッポンr」レギュラー決定!" (in Japanese). http://www.tristone.co.jp/news/?id=1269411234. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ Tristone (2011-03-10). "「オールナイトニッポン」パーソナリティ決定!" (in Japanese). http://www.tristone.co.jp/news/?id=129972103. Retrieved 2011-04-13.
- ^ (Japanese) "現役大学生miwa、平成生まれのソロ歌手初の1stアルバム首位" (in Japanese). Oricon. April 12, 2011. http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/rankmusic/86509/full/. Retrieved April 12, 2011.
- ^ a b "Hot 100|JAPAN Charts|Billboard JAPAN" (in Japanese). Billboard. http://www.billboard-japan.com/system/jp_charts/hot100/.
- ^ a b "有料音楽配信チャート" (in Japanese). RIAJ. http://www.riaj.or.jp/data/others/weekly_chart/index.html.
External links
- Official site (Japanese)
- Tristone Management site (Japanese)
- Official blog (Japanese)
Categories:- Living people
- Japanese musicians
- Japanese female singers
- Japanese singer-songwriters
- Japanese-language singers
- 1990 births
- Sony Music Japan artists
- People from Kanagawa Prefecture
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