A Japanese music video sampler
I've been amusing myself recently with looking up Japanese music videos on YouTube, to see if I can find the songs and artists that were popular when I was in Japan three years ago.
This may be due to some hidden masochism on my part, because as much as I like Japanese history and culture and the Japanese people themselves, I hate their pop music. You can judge for yourselves, but personally this was the one thing that always made me proud to be an American.
Still, I decided to share the following clips because they do provide a window into real, mainstream Japanese pop culture (it isn't all scary porn cartoons over there), and some of them are pretty entertaining in their own right.
1. Mr. Children, "Karumi" -- If you watch just one of these videos, choose this one. The song is nothing special, but I think it's a great video. It depicts the rise of fictional pop group "Mr. Adults". Only the young guy at the end is an actual member of Mr. Children. (Is it just me, or is "Mr. Children" the most subtly unsettling band name ever?)
2. EXILE, "Choo Choo TRAIN" -- this was a BIG hit in 2003, and it turns out it was actually a remake of a song that had been a hit in 1991. That explains why my slightly older coworkers liked it so much. My boss was particularly good at the dance that went with this song. Notable for both scenes of a real Japanese nightclub and the inclusion of a team of breakdancing, dreadlocked youngsters.
3. GLAY, "Yuuwaku" - GLAY is still popular today, but this looks to be an older video, maybe late '90s. I think the scrawny white woman is supposed to resemble Mila Jovovich. I chose this video because the obligatory random English lyrics are actually intelligible and coherent. Also, the (male) guitar player seems to be wearing a miniskirt.
4. Ayumi Hamasaki, "Startin" --Ms. Hamasaki is the Queen of Japanese Pop Music, sort of like Britney Spears a few years ago, or Mariah Carey a few years before that. This is a funny video that's also a nice example of the Japanese perception of American pop culture.

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