Nobuyasu Okabayashi
岡林信康
|
Born | 1946-07-22 (age 78) |
---|---|
Years active | 1968- |
Genres | |
Nobuyasu Okabayashi is a Japanese folk singer-songwriter whose career spans more than 50 years. Often compared to Bob Dylan, Rolling Stone Japan called him an icon of Japan's politically turbulent 1960s and 1970s. Okabayashi made his debut in 1968 and quickly earned the nickname the "God of Folk" with his protest songs. He spent 1975 to 1981 eschewing this title by experimenting with genres such as enka, pop, and new wave. Inspired by the rhythms of Japanese Bon Odori and Korean samul nori, he then created his own genre in the mid-1980s and 1990s that he dubbed "enyatotto" (エンヤトット). – Wikipedia |
Official Site |
Spotify |
Wikipedia (Japanese) |
Wikipedia (English) |
Ryo Kagawa |
Tetsuo Saito |
Shigeru Izumiya |
Neko |
Rokumonsen |
Hitoshi Komuro |
Kiyoshi Hasegawa |
Kenji Endo |
Itsutsu No Akai Fusen |
Tomoya Takaishi |
1 | Southern All Stars | ||
+37,961 (2,023,142) |
2 | Teresa Teng | ||
+11,663 (519,429) |
3 | Keisuke Kuwata | ||
+11,238 (810,352) |
4 | Yumi Arai | ||
+10,209 (536,551) |
5 | Masayoshi Takanaka | ||
+9,831 (420,194) |
6 | Yumi Matsutoya | ||
+6,660 (1,148,782) |
7 | Miyuki Nakajima | ||
+5,045 (286,896) |
8 | Taeko Ohnuki | ||
+4,318 (267,337) |
9 | Tatsuro Yamashita | ||
+3,989 (305,520) |
10 | Ryo Fukui | ||
+3,038 (177,043) |
|
|
|
|
|