Tanokin Trio
Appearance
Tanokin Trio (たのきんトリオ) was a Japanese group, composed of three Johnny's idols, Toshihiko Tahara (Toshi), Nomura Yoshio (Yoshi), Masahiko Kondo (Matchy).[1][2][3][4] It was active for a short period in the early 1980s (dissolved on 28 August 1983), they became icons among young people of their generation.[5][6][7] All three appeared as students in the first series of Kinpachi-sensei.[8]
Members
Nickname | Color | ||
---|---|---|---|
Toshihiko Tahara (Leader) | February 28, 1961, Type B blood, Yamanashi Prefecture | Toshi (トシちゃん) | ■Red |
Nomura Yoshio | October 26, 1964, Type A blood, Tokyo | Yoshi (ヨッちゃん) | ■Blue |
Masahiko Kondo | July 19, 1964, Type O blood, Kanagawa Prefecture | Matchy (マッチ) | ■Yellow |
Major casting works
Television
- Kinpachi-sensei (TBS)
- The first series (October 26, 1979 - March 28, 1980)
- The second series, episode 13 (December 26, 1980)
- Special 1 (October 8, 1982)
- Special 3 (October 5, 1984)
- Tadaima Hokago (ただいま放課後) (May 26 - September 19, 1980, Fuji TV)
- 幕末花の美剣士たち (January 4, 1981, TV Tokyo)
Variety
- Tanokin Zenryoku Tokyu (たのきん全力投球!) (October 9, 1980 - March 27, 1983, TBS)[9]
Film
Tanokin Super Hit Series
- Graffiti Youth: Sneaker Blues (February 11, 1981)[10]
- Blue Jeans Memory (July 11, 1981)[11]
- Good Luck Love (December 20, 1981)
- Highteen Boogie (August 7, 1982)[12]
- The Mysterious Gemini • Y&S (December 11, 1982)
- Heart Beat (August 4, 1983)[13]
Stage
- サヨナラ日劇FESTIVAL (February 11, 1981, Japan Theater)
- たのきんスーパースリー 桜島野外コンサート (typhoon in March 1981, canceled)
- たのきん3球コンサート (August 1981, August 1983)
Songs
- 君に贈る言葉 (アフター・スクール) (B side of Toshihiko Tahara's "Sorrowful Heart")
- ときめきはテレパシー (insert in the movie Good Luck Love)
Video
- たのきんHOTライブ (November 5, 1980, Pony Canyon)
- 3球コンサート 1983・8・28 大阪スタヂアム (1983)
Cassette tape & photo collection
- Takenokin Live '81 (July 8, 1981, Shueisha)
- Side A
- 哀愁メドレー(哀愁でいと~レッツゴー・ダンシング~ファンキー・モンキー・ベイビー~ルイジアナママ~哀愁トゥ・ナイト~哀愁でいと)
- スニーカーぶる~す
- 月の灯り
- ある日曜日の出来事
- Rockn Rollメドレー(恋のゴーカート~悲しき雨音~ハッピーバースデースウィート16~ダイアナ)
- Side B
- コール・ミー
- 雨が降ってきた
- ラストダンスは私と
- しらけちまうぜ
- ハッとして Good!
- ヨコハマ・チーク
- 恋はDo!
- 君にこのうたを
- Side A
References
- ^ Langlois, Tony (2017-07-05). Non-Western Popular Music. Routledge. ISBN 9781351556156.
- ^ "The "Johnny's" Entertainers Omnipresent on Japanese TV: Postwar Media and the Postwar Family | Discuss Japan-Japan Foreign Policy Forum". www.japanpolicyforum.jp. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- ^ "たのきんトリオ 田原俊彦/近藤真彦/野村義男". tanokin.main.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- ^ Moeran, Brian; Skov, Lise (2013-12-16). Women, Media and Consumption in Japan. Routledge. ISBN 9781136782800.
- ^ Raphael, Jackie; Lam, Celia; Weber, Millicent (2018-04-19). Disassembling the Celebrity Figure: Credibility and the Incredible. BRILL. ISBN 9789004365322.
- ^ Ewbank, Alison J.; Papageorgiou, Fouli T. (1997). Whose Master's Voice?: The Development of Popular Music in Thirteen Cultures. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313277726.
- ^ West, Mark D. (2008-09-15). Secrets, Sex, and Spectacle: The Rules of Scandal in Japan and the United States. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226894119.
- ^ Clements, Jonathan; Tamamuro, Motoko (2003-11-01). The Dorama Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese TV Drama Since 1953. Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 9781611725216.
- ^ KHAI-TV Japanese programming lineup, Honolulu Advertiser, March 18, 1984, TV Week section, page 9.
- ^ http://tanokin.main.jp/tanokin_movie01.html
- ^ Zahlten, Alexander (2017-09-15). The End of Japanese Cinema: Industrial Genres, National Times, and Media Ecologies. Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822372462.
- ^ http://tanokin.main.jp/tanokin_movie04.html
- ^ http://www.ihkmusic.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=VE11901&txtParam=0&txtCat=%BC@%B1%A1%A4%F9