
She'd like her style returned right now.Just joking there.

Yoko's manager: Hey, Yoko? Anri just called. Placed as a track on her 2nd studio album "Prime Privacy". I've realized that another aural touchstone for my music of the late 1980s and early 1990s is that synth on horn mode since I've heard it with other singers such as Miki Imai(今井美樹)at around the same time.In any case, the ever-smiling Moriguchi's "Dress Up The Night" seems to be all about the painting the town red and tripping the light fantastic. They really did like those trumpet-sounding synthesizers back then, eh?Starting off Monday with this sprightly song by singer/tarento/impressionist Hiroko Moriguchi(森口博子), "Dress Up The Night". An old friend of mine used to tease me mercilessly about whenever I arrived at the doors of a buffet restaurant, the staff would go on Defcon 1 and breathlessly order more food. Well, there was a Chinese buffet restaurant near the East Gate, and of course back then, buffet was the gift that kept on giving for me. It was about early evening and I decided that I would get some dinner before heading back to my hotel in Sakuragicho, some 20 minutes walk up from the area. One sage lesson that I learned when I was having a weekend in Yokohama occurred as I was touring through the city's Chinatown. Īkira Kurosawa & Los Primos - Nurete Yokohama(ぬれて横浜) recently provided an article for her 1989 4th single, "Yume Dake Miteru"(夢だけ見てる)so have a look at that one when you can."Jane Birkin" was the title track for her 3rd.

One such cover was for "Owari no Kehai"(終わりの気配)originally sung by 80s aidoru Yuki Saito(斉藤由貴).The other was "Jane Birkin no you ni Nakeba Ii" (Cry Like Jane Birkin) which was first recorded by late 80s and 90s aidoru Miwa Kawagoe(川越美和). I was listening to singer-songwriter Mioko Yamaguchi's(山口未央子)latest album "Floma", and the last three tracks happened to be her own covers of songs that she had provided to other singers.
