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Among them, Yamashita recorded "Misty Mauve" for Artisan, although it was not released until 2002 on his Rarities album. [3] The closing track of Artisan is a cover version of The Young Rascals' 1967 U.S. number-one hit. [4] It has been also the ending theme for Sunday Songbook, a weekly radio program that Yamashita has hosted since 1992.
Rarities is the compilation album by a Japanese singer-songwriter Tatsuro Yamashita, released in October 2002. The album is mainly composed of the songs which had initially appeared on B-sides of his previous singles and not included on any albums.
Tatsuro Collection: 35 Unofficial 1986 Ballad for You: 37 Rock'n Funk Tatsu: 59 1990 Best Pack I (1976–1979) — Best Pack II (1979–1982) Tatsuro Songs From L.A. Platz Unofficial, English covers of his songs by various artists 1991 Tatsuro Songs From L.A. 2: 1995 Treasures: 1 Moon/East West: 1,200,000+ 2002 The RCA/AIR Years LP Box 1976 ...
In addition, a live version of the theme song "Bokura no Natsu no Yume" from the animated movie "Summer Wars" was included in the single. [3] The artwork of the first limited edition features the main visual of the movie, and the regular edition features "Tatsuro-kun" (drawn by Miki Tori) riding a motorcycle. [2]
In 1990, BMG Victor told Yamashita of its plans to release the album, and it asked Smile [nb 1] to provide technical help for the project. Smile agreed, and in September 1990 the album was released (BVCR-2505) with the phrase "the only album authorized by Tatsuro Yamashita" displayed on the "obi strip".
The A-side of Big Wave is composed of the songs Tatsuro Yamashita wrote, and the rest of the album consists mostly of cover versions of compositions of the Beach Boys' frontman Brian Wilson. The song "The Theme from Big Wave" was first aired on the NHK-FM radio program hosted by Yamashita in January 1983 as "Mahou wo Oshiete" ( 魔法を教え ...
However Tatsuro Yamashita was told that one of his songs in the Go Ahead! album "Bomber" was a hit song in a disco in Osaka. Therefore, in 1979, a promotional single was released under the title of "Bomber".
It was originally included on the album Niagara Triangle Vol.1 issued in 1976, the project recorded by the supergroup composed of Yamashita, Ginji Itō and Eiichi Ohtaki. The song (newly remixed by Ohtaki) became a minor hit 17 years after the first release, featured on the children's program Ponkickies and released as a solo single by ...