Latest Release
- SEP 25, 2024
- 14 Songs
- Kyo 2 -Anniversary Song- · 1991
- Kogarashi Ni Dakarete - Single · 1986
- Hippies · 1987
- Breezing · 1983
- Adesugata Namida Musume - Single · 1983
- Kyo 2 -Anniversary Song- · 1994
- Kyo 2 -Anniversary Song- · 1984
- Structure of Romance (feat. koizumi kyoko) - Single · 2023
- Ballad Classics 3 (2024 Mastering) · 2024
- Nagisa No Hikara Ningyo - Single · 1984
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
- 2023
- 2012
Appears On
- ASA-CHANG & JUNRAY
About koizumi kyoko
Born in 1966 in Atsugi, Kanagawa Prefecture, Kyoko Koizumi is one of the most enduringly popular idol singers in Japan, with a singing and acting career spanning three decades and encompassing a number of styles and reinventions of image. Koizumi first gained fame through the TV talent show Star Tenjou! which had previously provided the first break for successful artists such as Junko Sakurada, Momoe Yamaguchi, and idol duo Pink Lady, and in 1982 released her debut single "Watashi no 16-Sai," a pop song in the traditional "kayoukyoku" mold that had characterized Japanese pop since the late '60s, and which reached number 22 in the Japanese charts. 1983 saw Koizumi emerge with a more boyish image and synthesizers began to take a more prominent place in her music, notably on the singles "Makka no Onnanoko" and "Adesu ga Amida Musume." It also saw the beginning of a run of Top Ten singles that remained unbroken for more than 12 years, until 1995's "Beautiful Girls." From 1984 and 1985, Koizumi's image shifted in a more mature direction, incorporating more of an influence from rock and new wave, with songwriting and arrangement contributions by new wave and techno-pop luminaries such as Masahide Sakuma of the Plastics, YMO collaborator (and Ryuichi Sakamoto's then wife) Akiko Yano, and Kenzo Saeki of Halmens and Pearl Brothers. As the '80s drew to a close, Koizumi began to shift between styles more frequently, with the house-influenced "Fade Out," written by Haruo Chikada reaching number two in the charts in 1989. In 1990, she began writing her own lyrics, and collaborated with Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra on the song "Oka wo Koete." 1994's "My Sweet Home," with music by Takeshi Kobayashi (later of My Little Lover) pointed the way to the slick J-Pop sound that would come to dominate the late '90s. By this point, however, Koizumi's successful acting career had come to overshadow her music and her releases became sporadic, drying up almost completely by the end of the '90s. Nevertheless, she continued to make occasional returns to the musical arena, releasing the album Atsugi I.C. in 2003 and Nice Middle, featuring collaborations with Tokyo No.1 Soul Set and Asa-Chang, among others, in 2008. ~ Ian Martin
- HOMETOWN
- Japan
- BORN
- February 4, 1966
- GENRE
- J-Pop