Shizuko Kasagi
笠置シヅ子
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Isao Hayashi |
Chiemi Eri |
Noriko Awaya |
Izumi Yukimura |
Tony Tani |
Danny Iida & Paradise King |
Eto Kunieda |
Hideko Takamine |
Hamako Watanabe |
Shigeko Orii |
Mieko Takamine |
The Peanuts |
Chiyoko Shimakura |
Ichimaru |
Yoshiko Yamaguchi |
Mariko Miyagi |
Frank Nagai |
Fubuki Koshiji |
Akira Kobayashi |
Peggy Hayama |
Three Cats |
Ayumi Ishida |
Mie Nakao |
Sachiko Nishida |
Jun Mayuzumi |
Mieko Hirota |
Mina Aoe |
Kenji Endo |
Naomi Chiaki |
Honey Nights |
Teruko Akatsuki |
Aiko Hirano |
Yukari Ito |
Mari Natsuki |
The Folk Crusaders |
Keiko Fuji |
Nikaido Kazumi |
Jackey Yoshikawa & His Blue Comets |
Blue Triangle |
Pinky & Killers |
Michiyo Azusa |
Saori Yuki |
Tomiko Hattori |
Down Town Boogie Woogie Band |
Linda Yamamoto |
Michiko Hamamura |
Morio Agata |
Hiroshi Uchiyamada and Cool Five |
Katsutaro Kouta |
Yoshiko Otsu |
Kiyohiko Ozaki |
Finger 5 |
Miki Hirayama |
Aki Yashiro |
Tokiko Kato |
Komadori Shimai |
Saori Minami |
Born | 1914-08-25 |
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Died | 1985-03-30 (aged 70) |
Years active | 1927-1985 |
Genres | |
Shizuko Kasagi was a Japanese jazz singer and actress. At the peak of her fame in the immediate post-war era, she earned the nickname the "Queen of Boogie" . Kasagi frequently sang songs composed by Ryōichi Hattori, including 1947's "Tokyo Boogie-Woogie", which remains her best-known work. Yoshinori Gyobe, a professor at Nihon University, said that with Hattori's bright boogie rhythms and Kasagi's lively singing of melodies that did not exist in Japan, the duo changed the image of Japanese music. – Wikipedia |
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Wikipedia (Japanese) |
Wikipedia (English) |
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