Japanese pop, rather Jpop, is pigeonholed as cute, ear saccharine. That might not exactly be fair. But thereās no arguing, sometimes Jpop needs more guitars. More awesome hair. Sometimes it needs more metal.
Sometimes Jpop needs more Marty Friedman. Marty Friedman (above, center) is a great, great guitarist who is perhaps best known for his ten year tenture in Megadeth, playing on albums like Rust in Peace and Countdown to Extinction
While in Megadeth, Friedman toured Japan throughout the 1990s and fell in love with the pop of the era, namely Namie Amuro and Ayumi Hamasaki. āIn Jpop, thereās a lot of hetauma,ā Friedman said in a TV interview back in 2010. āI love hetauma.ā Hetauma means that something might look crude or poor at first glance, but it is actually much deeper.
https://lastchance.cc/japans-biggest-pop-diva-returns-to-video-games-5714055%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
In 2003, Friedman moved to Shinjuku, where heās resided since. Heās collaborated with some of the countryās biggest popstars, such as PokĆ©mon queen Shoko Nakagawa. While in Tokyo, heās also contributed songs to Japanese games such Konamiās Guitar Freaks and DrumMania games as well as a (shitty) Sonic gameāFriedmanās work was top flight.
https://lastchance.cc/boy-this-lady-loves-the-legend-of-zelda-ocarina-of-ti-5827249%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Next month, as website Anime News Network pointed out, Friedman is releasing his second Tokyo Jukebox album, which features his guitar arrangements of Jpop tunes like AKB48ās Aitakatta (sample here) and Toire no Kamisama (sample here). Note: Toire no Kamisama isnāt traditional sugary girl group Jpop, and follows in tradition of the talented female Japanese singer songwriters of the early 1970s. Friedmanās first Tokyo Jukebox featured his take on SMAP, among other Japanese artists.
Friedman isnāt the first Western rocker to record his versions of Japanese pop. In 2009, Andrew W.K. released a Gundam Rock album (sample here ), which is all kinds of badass.
Marty Friedmanās Tokyo Jukebox 2 will be released on September 14 in Japan, just in time for the Tokyo Game Show. Check it out.
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(Top photo: Jim Cooper, Wally Santana, Koji Sasahara, Lionel Cironneau | AP)
You can contact Brian Ashcraft, the author of this post, at [emailĀ protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.