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{{nihongo|'''Misia'''|MISIA(ミーシャ)|Mīsha|born July 7, 1978, in [[Fukuoka]], Japan}} is a Japanese [[Rhythm and blues|R&B]] singer signed to [[BMG Japan]]. She debuted on February 21, 1998 and is one of the few artists in Japan to have never performed on any TV music show and to be popular despite this.{{Citation needed|date=November 2011}} All nine of her studio albums to date have cracked the top 5 and she is one of the most successful touring artists in the 2000s, the first female artist to play all five of Japan's largest stadiums.
'''Misia''' ([[Japanese language|Japanese]]: MISIA;<ref>"Saigenji新作", ''Yomuri Online'', Sept. 1, 2005.</ref> born July 7, 1978, in [[Fukuoka]], Japan) is a Japanese [[Rhythm and blues|R&B]] singer signed to [[BMG Japan]]. She debuted on February 21, 1998 and is one of the few artists in Japan to have never performed on any TV music show and to be popular despite this.{{Citation needed|date=November 2011}} All nine of her studio albums to date have cracked the top 5 and she is one of the most successful touring artists in the 2000s, the first female artist to play all five of Japan's largest stadiums.


Misia is also a committed philanthropist<ref name="JPTimes">{{cite news|url=http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fm20090626a1.html|title=Misia changes with charity|author=Robert Michael Poole|publisher=[[The Japan Times]]|accessdate=2011-05-14|date=2009-06-26}}</ref> who has founded the charity Child Africa and was named an honorary [[United Nations ambassador]] in 2010.<ref name="CNNGo">{{cite news|url=http://www.cnngo.com/tokyo/life/misia-sings-out-world-interview-387166|title=MISIA: How the R&B singer hopes to make a difference outside of music|author=Robert Michael Poole|publisher=[[CNN]]|accessdate=2011-05-14|date=2010-07-27}}</ref>
Misia is also a committed philanthropist<ref name="JPTimes">{{cite news|url=http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fm20090626a1.html|title=Misia changes with charity|author=Robert Michael Poole|publisher=[[The Japan Times]]|accessdate=2011-05-14|date=2009-06-26}}</ref> who has founded the charity Child Africa and was named an honorary [[United Nations ambassador]] in 2010.<ref name="CNNGo">{{cite news|url=http://www.cnngo.com/tokyo/life/misia-sings-out-world-interview-387166|title=MISIA: How the R&B singer hopes to make a difference outside of music|author=Robert Michael Poole|publisher=[[CNN]]|accessdate=2011-05-14|date=2010-07-27}}</ref>

Revision as of 00:47, 18 November 2011

Misia
Born (1978-07-07) July 7, 1978 (age 46)
OriginFukuoka, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan
GenresPop, R&B
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
Instrument(s)Vocals, piano, guitar, trumpet, flute
Years active1998–present
LabelsRhythmedia Tribe, BMG Japan
Avex Trax
BMG Japan
Ariola Japan
Websitewww.misia.jp

Misia (Japanese: MISIA;[1] born July 7, 1978, in Fukuoka, Japan) is a Japanese R&B singer signed to BMG Japan. She debuted on February 21, 1998 and is one of the few artists in Japan to have never performed on any TV music show and to be popular despite this.[citation needed] All nine of her studio albums to date have cracked the top 5 and she is one of the most successful touring artists in the 2000s, the first female artist to play all five of Japan's largest stadiums.

Misia is also a committed philanthropist[2] who has founded the charity Child Africa and was named an honorary United Nations ambassador in 2010.[3]

Biography

Early life

Misia was born on July 7, 1978, in Fukuoka, Kyushu, to parents who were both doctors. Her father loved jazz, and mother loved Western music. Originally both her parents studied vocal music. She is the youngest of three children, with an older brother and sister.

She moved to Tsushima, Nagasaki on account of her parents' jobs.[2] She began to learn piano at the age of 4 under the influence of her elder brother and her elder sister. She joined the local chorus at the age of 9, and she discovered her five-octave singing voice while at her older sister's private music lessons. From then on she dreamed of becoming a singer and later won a contest in Fukuoka.

She gradually came to want to leave Tsushima, where she was not able to get enough information about music, and wanted to take voice lessons in earnest in Fukuoka. Subsequently she left her home and moved to Fukuoka with her elder sister who went to the university of Fukuoka where she attended high school. During junior high and high school she sang and played the trumpet in the brass band club.

While going to the high school, she also began to go to a music academy and met two African-American vocal trainers there while she was in the eleventh grade. She began training with them in gospel and R&B, but failed all her auditions in high school. In April, 1997, she was accepted into Seinan Gakuin University in commercial science.

Career beginnings

In May 1997, Misia finally passed a BMG Japan audition to find a soulful female R&B singer. Misia sang "Goodbye Darlin'" by Dreams Come True and was chosen from about 3,000 candidates. She decided to pursue a music career instead of school education and took a leave of absence from university. She was conscious of the image of an R&B singer and styled her hair in dreadlocks that November. She used the stage name "MISIA" at the beginning her music career.

Establishing her popularity: 1998–2002

Misia debuted on February 21, 1998, with "Tsutsumikomu You ni..." which peaked at number 11 on the Oricon single charts.

Her second single "Hi no Ataru Basho" reached number 9 and was used in the soundtrack of the movie Hood. Her first album, Mother Father Brother Sister, was released on June 24, 1998, entering the charts at number 3 and reaching number 1 after 4 weeks. In March 1999, she won Best New Artist of the Year and Best Pop Album of the Year at the Japan Gold Disc Awards.

Misia's second album, Love Is the Message was released on January 1, 2000, which went on to sell over 2 million copies. In October of the same year she released her most well-known song "Everything", which sold nearly 1.9 million copies.[4]

In 2001, one of Misia's dreams came true with the release of "I Miss You (Toki o Koete)", a collaboration with Dreams Come True, her favorite band. Masato Nakamura, the leader of DCT and her created the song while Misia wrote the lyrics. The single was released on January 1, 2001.

Avex Trax: 2002–2007

In 2002, she transferred to a new record label, Rhythmedia Tribe, affiliated with Avex Group.

Her single "Kokoro Hitotsu" released on August 27, 2003 was used as the theme song to the hit movie Dragon Head.

The single "Namae no Nai Sora o Miagete", released on July 7, 2004, was used as the theme song for the drama Tenka. "Tobikata o Wasureta Chiisana Tori" is used as the theme song of the PlayStation 2 role-playing game Star Ocean: Till the End of Time and also appears within the game as an orchestral arrangement. Also, "Sea of Dreams" was used as the Tokyo DisneySea 5th Anniversary theme song.

Misia became the first female solo act to tour the five major dome stadiums of Japan (Tokyo Dome, Nagoya Dome, Osaka Dome, Sapporo Dome and Fukuoka Dome) in 2004, drawing 357,000 spectators in seven performances.[5]

Return to BMG Japan: 2007–present

It was announced on May 1, 2007 that Misia had left Avex Trax to return to her former record label, BMG Japan. "Any Love" was released on July 4, 2007, composed by Satoshi Shimano, who also produced her debut hit.

On September 29, 2007, Misia held her first overseas concert in Taiwan.

Her next single, "Royal Chocolate Flush", was released in December 2007, and the first album since returning to BMG, Eighth World, came out in January 2008.

Ichiro Suzuki (Seattle Mariners), a major league player, chose "Ishin Denshin" and "Royal Chocolate Flush" by Misia as an at-bat music of 2008 with Sayuri Ishikawa's "Amagi-goe".

In May 2008, Misia joined Sadao Watanabe, Juanes, Youssou N'Dour, and Bono for the 'One For All' event on May 29, 2008 for 1,500 in Yokohama, Japan.[6]

Misia put out three new releases from April to June 2008: Yes Forever in April, Yakusoku no Tsubasa in May, and Decimo X Anniversario de Misia: The Tour of Misia 2008 Eighth World + The Best DJ Remixes in June.

In continuation of her 10th anniversary celebration, Misia released her very first digital single, "Catch the Rainbow" (produced by Sakoshin) on August 30, 2008.]

She wrapped up The Tour of Misia Discothèque Asia in early March, a tour that brought her to Seoul, Singapore, Hong Kong and Shanghai and opened her eyes to the different responses of crowds as she noted "In Japan, it is like people are melting into one group in their excitement, but in Singapore young couples started to kiss. I often see Japanese couples hand-in-hand, but it is rare to see them showing they love each other in front of others."

In 2008, Misia drew near more than 200,000 spectators, second only to Ayumi Hamasaki in the number of concert-goers for a solo female artist in Japan.

The June 2009 single "Ginga/Itsumademo" was inspired by Misia visiting her grandfather for the last time before his death, for which she stated upon its release, "I thanked him for taking me out for a walk when I was a child, for teaching me how to fold origami and make shadow pictures, and for telling me stories. I couldn't stop saying thank you."[2]

Misia's 2010 tour titled "Hoshizora no Live VI" included performances in the open air and within forests in order to raise awareness of biodiversity and to support her anthropological work.[3]

For the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, Misia recorded the song "Maware Maware" and performed it at Nelson Mandela Square in Johannesburg before the Japan vs Cameroon game.[3] She was also inspired by the International Year of Biodiversity and wrote the song "Life in Harmony", eventually chosen by the Convention on Biological Diversity to be the song for the conference.[7]

In 2011, Misia returned to recording with the song "Ashita e" to raise money for victims of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and "Kioku", Misia's first official single in nearly a year and a half.

Philanthropic work

Misia began getting involved in fund-raising in 2002 and went on to visit Kenya, Mali, and Malawi, setting up the charity Child Africa.[8] Child Africa holds exhibitions, benefit concerts, collects donations and provides help of educational specialists and advisers.[2] Some of Misia's own tour merchandise available at her shows are made by people she has met on her visits to Kenya.

On March 1, 2010 Misia was appointed Honorary Ambassador for the 10th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (COP10) by the U.N. Secretary General.[3] Her role was largely to raise awareness of the issues and she created a website titled Satoyama Basket[9] to encourage education on the issue of biodiversity.

At her 2010 "Hoshizora no Live VI" tour, Misia produced a "Biodivesity Band" (a silicon bracelet) with profits going to the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity. The tour also included a biodiversity booth under the cooperation of the Japanese Ministry of the Environment.[3]

During the 2010 World Cup, for which Misia contributed a song, she visited the "Football for Hope Center" to communicate with local children who received football lessons but also advice on HIV & AIDS.[3]

In May 2010, Misia expanded her activities by establishing a foundation named "mudef" (Music Design Foundation) for which she is a board member. The principal aim of mudef is "to raise awareness on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to accelerate its accomplishment". Within eight major goals of MDGs that are to be met by 2015, the conservation of biodiversity and the achievement of universal primary school, her two major focuses, are included.[3]

Discography

References

  1. ^ "Saigenji新作", Yomuri Online, Sept. 1, 2005.
  2. ^ a b c d Robert Michael Poole (2009-06-26). "Misia changes with charity". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Robert Michael Poole (2010-07-27). "MISIA: How the R&B singer hopes to make a difference outside of music". CNN. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  4. ^ "MISIA シングル チャートイン作品売上データ06年05月22日付". Oricon (in Japanese). May 24, 2006. Retrieved October 4, 2009.
  5. ^ "The Tour of MISIA 2004 Mars & Roses". Generasia. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  6. ^ "Bono, Misia in One For All". Japan-Zone. 2008-05-31. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  7. ^ "MISIA、新曲が「COP10」オフィシャル・ソングに決定! - CDJournal.com ニュース". CDJournal (in Japanese). 2010-09-21. Retrieved 2010-09-23.
  8. ^ "Child Africa".
  9. ^ "Satoyama Backet".

External links

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