Sachiko Kanenobu, the First Female Japanese Songwriter, Composer, and Performer
With her first album 'Misora', released in 1972, the guitarist and folk singer achieved great success that endured for years.
Seven days is all it took to record Misora, the first album by guitarist and singer Sachiko Kanenobu, with the majority of the songs being recorded in just one take. This folk album was produced by the iconic duo Haruomi Hosono and Takashi Matsumoto, leaders of the group Happy End. Misora, released in September 1972, contains gentle pop melodies in which the artist alludes, with restraint, to the feelings of love and melancholy she experienced as a young woman of twenty.
An album that was shelved for years
Sachiko Kanenobu was born in Osaka and also grew up there, and started learning the guitar as folk music was beginning to take over school playgrounds and colleges. Heavily inspired by Donovan, a leading British musician in the mid-60s, the young woman wrote the lyrics and melodies for the songs included on Misora. She had to be patient, however. Her record company Underground Record Club (URC), one of the first independent labels in Japan, relegated her music to the bottom of the list for many years, preferring to shine the spotlight on the folk scene’s male musicians. ‘It was still a man’s world in Japan. URC focused on songs with a big message. Anti-war, social statements… The music was mostly by men. But women were pushed to the back. I waited and waited’, Sachiko Kanenobu explained in an interview with Popmatters in July 2019.
Once released, Misora experienced great success in Japan, which has never waned. This is evident from her sell-out tour of the country in 2018, during which Sachiko Kanenobu played her iconic album in its entirety, and the fact that the Seattle-based independent record label Light in the Attic reissued a remastered version of the album in June 2019.
Misora (2019), the reissue of Sachiko Kanenobu’s album, is produced by Light in the Attic.
© Light in the attic
© Light in the attic
© Light in the attic
© Light in the attic
TRENDING
-
A House from the Taisho Era Reveals Its Secrets
While visiting an abandoned building, Hamish Campbell discovered photographs the owner had taken of the place in the 1920s.
-
The Taboo-Breaking Erotica of Toshio Saeki
The master of the 1970s Japanese avant-garde reimagined his most iconic artworks for a limited box set with silkscreen artist Fumie Taniyama.
-
With Meisa Fujishiro, Tokyo's Nudes Stand Tall
In the series 'Sketches of Tokyo', the photographer revisits the genre by bringing it face to face with the capital's architecture.
-
Masahisa Fukase's Family Portraits
In his series ‘Family’, the photographer compiles surprising photos in which he questions death, the inescapable.
-
Hajime Sorayama's Futuristic Eroticism
The illustrator is the pioneer for a form of hyperrealism that combines sensuality and technology and depicts sexualised robots.