Kyōhei Tsutsumi Musical artist

Kyōhei Tsutsumi (筒美 京平, Tsutsumi Kyouhei) (born Eikichi Watanabe, May 28, 1940), is a Japanese composer, record producer and arranger.Tsutsumi began his career as a songwriter circa 1966, and he came to prominence as a composer of Ayumi Ishida's chart-topping hit "Blue Light Yokohama" in the late 1960s. He has released nearly 3,000 compositions to date, over 500 of which have entered the Japanese Oricon singles chart. Tsutsumi is the most commercially successful composer of the Japanese popular music of last five decades, selling over 76 million units on the country's single chart from 1968 onwards.Two of his compositions won the grand prix of Japan Record Award— "Mata Au Hi Made" performed by Kiyohiko Ozaki in 1971 and "Miserarete" by Judy Ongg in 1979. Tsutsumi himself has also won the awards for best songwriting category for five times. Recognized for his long-term contribution to establish Japanese popular music, Tsutsumi received the Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon by the Government of Japan in November 2003.

Personal facts

Alias (AKA)Jack Diamond
Birth dateMay 28, 1940
Hometown
Japan
Tokyo
Ushigome Tokyo

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Musical artist

Career started1963
BackgroundSolo singer
genre
Pop music
Rock music
Soft rock
Kayōkyoku
Easy listening
Enka
record label
King Records (Japan)
Victor Entertainment
Sony Music Entertainment
EMI Music Japan
Nippon Columbia

Kyōhei Tsutsumi on Wikipedia