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Mariya takeuchi plastic love eki
Mariya takeuchi plastic love eki










mariya takeuchi plastic love eki

I wanted to write something that had 16 beats and lyrics capturing what life in a city was like.” According to Takeuchi, the lyrics are about a woman who lost her true love. “I also wanted to write something danceable, something with a city pop sound. “I wanted to write a rock song, a folk song, a country song,” she added. Pam & Tommy fall into Seth Rogen's skeezy clutches in the first trailer for FX series Hundreds Stung as Extreme Storms Unleash Scorpion Plague in Egypt “I was writing songs at the time because it was fun for me.” (Full disclosure: I am a columnist at The Japan Times.)Ī-Rod, listen close, if you want your baseball career to end with the ultimate honor, you need to stop the cheatingĢ0 Movies So Bad, They're Actually Really GoodĪpple Finally Lets You Repair Your Own iPhone “I was pregnant with a child at the time, so it wasn’t like I was really able to indulge in the bubble-era excess in the same way as others could,” Takeuchi told The Japan Times. Written and sung by Mariya Takeuchi, “Plastic Love” is pure “city pop,” a loosely-defined, breezy genre that has been described as “music made by city people, for city people.” Few things evoke the heady 1980s bubble era Japan more than city pop tunes. This month, well over three decades after its original release, the song’s full-length official video was finally uploaded to YouTube and, according to Warner Music Japan, its re-issued 12-inch single also broke the country’s top ten sales chart for the first time. Recorded in 1984, “Plastic Love” is the song that continues to make comeback after comeback. The official music video reminds me of those overwrought karaoke videos that play at Japanese karaoke parlors, which suits the vibe. A woman sits in the back of a taxi while "Plastic Love Mariya Takeuchi" flashes on the screen.












Mariya takeuchi plastic love eki