中山晋平
About 中山晋平
Shimpei Nakayama (中山 晋平, Nakayama Shimpei, March 22, 1887 – December 30, 1952) was a Japanese songwriter, famous for his many children's songs and popular songs (ryūkōka) that have become deeply embedded in Japanese popular culture.
Nakayama was born in Nagano Prefecture, Nakano City, in 1887. His father died while he was very young, and his mother Zō raised Shimpei, his older brother and other siblings alone. She often took in washing and sewing to make ends meet. Shimpei was interested in music from the time he attended Nakano Elementary School, where he and his classmates would sing to the accompaniment of a small organ (what he called a "baby organ"). The songs they sang included popular military marches from the Sino-Japanese War (1894-95). At one point a small brass band sponsored by the Salvation Army came to town to play, and Nakayama remembers being smitten by the sound. His classmates remember him as an accomplished player of the Japanese transverse flute who would often play during Obon and other festivals at the local Shinto shrines and Buddhist temple. When Shimpei graduated from elementary school he took the required examinations and became a substitute elementary school teacher. His dream was to become a music teacher. For that, he had to go to school in Tokyo. So in 1905 he moved to Japan's capitol city and became a household servant for Waseda University English Literature professor Shimamura Hōgetsu.
In 1914, Nakayama composed the song "Katyusha's song" for a dramatization of Tolstoy's Resurrection. The song, sung by actress Sumako Matsui, was a massive hit and Nakayama became famous almost overnight. Today this song is considered one of the earliest examples of modern Japanese popular music.
Another of his most famous songs is "Tokyo ondo", which was a great countrywide hit in the 1930s. Today it is also known as the theme song of the baseball team Tokyo Yakult Swallows.
His most famous children's songs are "Shabondama", "Teru teru bozu", "Amefuri", "Ano machi kono machi" and "Sekurabe", among others.
Nakayama's song "Gondola no Uta" features prominently in Akira Kurosawa's film Ikiru.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
Shinpei Nakayama
, which is released under the
Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
Interesting links - 中山晋平
Top Playlists
See all ›Trending right now on mozaart
1
ROCKSTAR (feat. Roddy Ricch)
DaBaby, Roddy Ricch
2
For The Night (feat. Lil Baby & DaBaby)
Pop Smoke, Lil Baby, DaBaby
3
Watermelon Sugar
Harry Styles
4
The Woo (feat. 50 Cent & Roddy Ricch)
Pop Smoke, 50 Cent, Roddy Ricch
5
WHATS POPPIN (feat. DaBaby, Tory Lanez & Lil Wayne) - Remix
Jack Harlow, DaBaby, Lil Wayne, Tory Lanez
6
Blinding Lights
The Weeknd
7
Blueberry Faygo
Lil Mosey
8
Party Girl
StaySolidRocky
9
Savage Love (Laxed - Siren Beat)
Jawsh 685, Jason Derulo
10
We Paid (feat. 42 Dugg)
Lil Baby, 42 Dugg
Hottest videos on mozaart right now
Share
Sharing is caring! Thank you for spreading the word!
Help us
Give us your feedback
- OR -
No account yet? Join us!
Create account
Create account
- OR -
{{ translate(errors.email[0]) }}
Already have an account?
Login
Login