Yasuha
Yasuha | |
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Born | Ebina Yasuha (海老名 泰葉) January 17, 1961 |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1981 2007 –present | –1988
Spouse | Shūnpūtei Koasa
(m. 1988; div. 2007) |
Parents |
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Relatives |
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Musical career | |
Genres | |
Instruments |
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Labels |
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Website | Yasuha Official Site & Blog |
Yasuha Ebina (海老名 泰葉, born January 17, 1961),[1] known professionally as Yasuha, is a Japanese singer-songwriter, tarento, record producer, and entrepreneur. Ebina's personal life has often sparked controversy and received widespread media coverage. As well as her singing career, she was also successful as a tarento, appearing in numerous Japanese television and radio programs.
Ebina was born in Taitō, Tokyo as a child of a rakugo performer Hayashiya Sanpei I and a novelist Kayoko Ebina. She established her singing career in 1981. As a singer, Ebina is best-known for "Flyday Chinatown" (1981), which peaked at number sixty-nine on the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart. She also embarked on the tarento career, appearing in the Japanese variety television program Gogo wa MaruMaru Omoikkiri TV (1987–1988) as a host. In 1988, Ebina retired from the entertainment business after her marriage with a rakugo performer Shūnpūtei Koasa.
After a messy divorce with her ex-husband, Ebina officially returned to the entertainment industry in 2007, founding a production company Iron Candle.
Early life
[edit]Yasuha Ebina was born on January 17, 1961, in Taitō, Tokyo, as the second child of a rakugo performer Hayashiya Sanpei I and a novelist Kayoko Ebina. Her grandfather, Hayashiya Shōzō VII was also a rakugo performer, as well as her two brothers, Hayashiya Shōzō IX and Hayashiya Sanpei II. Her sister, Midori Ebina is a former actress. As a child, Ebina learned classical music, however, after failing to enter college of music, she began pursuing a career as a J-pop singer instead.
Career
[edit]In 1979, Ebina began her tarento career, appearing in the numerous television and radio programs such as the Japanese television variety shows Variety Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do (1979–1982) and Gogo wa MaruMaru Omoikkiri TV (1987–1988).[2]
Ebina established her singing career in 1981, releasing her debut single "Flyday Chinatown" via Polydor Records.[3] The song was a moderate success, peaking at number sixty-nine on the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart and selling approximately 56,000 copies. As a singer, she has released seven studio albums and two compilation albums as of June 2020. She has also written few songs for other artists, including Shohjo-Tai's hit "Motto Charleston" (1986), which reached number sixteen in Japan.
In June 1988, Ebina married a rakugo performer Shūnpūtei Koasa, and subsequently retired from the entertainment industry to support Koasa as a president of his production company, Haru Haru Dō. However, in November 2007, the couple announced the divorce in the press conference at the Imperial Hotel, Tokyo, and the relaunch of Ebina's entertainment career. Ebina drew mass public attention for publishing a book about the divorce, "Kaiun Rikon", and appearing in the professional wrestling match with Yoji Anjo as a player. In November 2008, she released her first single in the last twenty-two years, "Ohisama yo Hohoende" via her own record label, Iron Candles.
Personal life
[edit]Relationships
[edit]Ebina married a rakugo performer Shūnpūtei Koasa in June 1988 and retired from the entertainment business in order to support Koasa as a wife. Ebina and Koasa announced their separation on November 12, 2007, in the press conference. The divorce drew big public attention and widespread media coverage after Ebina slurred Koasa, calling him a "blonde pig asshole", and published a book "Kaiun Rikon", in which she wrote about her divorce with Koasa.
On September 20, 2017, Ebina announced that she engaged with an Iranian businessman, Mehdi Kazempour, whom she met on Facebook. The couple called off the engagement and parted ways in April 2018.
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]Title | Album details |
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Transit | |
Vivid |
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Waffusshigii. (わっ不っ思議ー。) |
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Reserved |
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Waffusshigii. Part.2 (わっ不っ思議ー。 Part.2) |
|
White Key |
|
Yahhoo! |
|
Compilation albums
[edit]Title | Album details |
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Yasuha: Single Collection | |
Golden Best Yasuha |
|
Singles
[edit]As a lead artist
[edit]Title | Year | Album |
---|---|---|
"Flyday Chinatown" (フライディ・チャイナタウン) | 1981 | Transit |
"Blue Night Blue" (ブルーナイト・ブルー) | 1982 | Vivid |
"Mizuiro no One Piece" (水色のワンピース) | Waffusshigii. | |
"Paul Poly Paula" (ポール・ポーリー・ポーラ) | 1983 | Yasuha: Single Collection |
"Cool Town" | Waffusshigii. Part.2 | |
"Natsu no Koi, Jealousy" (夏の恋・ジェラシー) | 1984 | White Key |
"Shitamachi Swing" (下町スウィング) | ||
"Sincerely Yours" | 1986 | Yahhoo! |
"Ohisama yo Hohoende" (お陽様よほほえんで) | 2008 | Non-album singles |
"I Believe" | 2009 | |
"Sakura Mau Hi wa" (桜舞う日は) | 2015 | |
"Smile" | 2017 | |
"Shinnai no Mythology" (深愛のmythology) | 2018 |
Songwriting credits
[edit]Title | Year | Artist | Album |
---|---|---|---|
"Meguro no Jikka e Kaerimasu" (目黒の実家へ帰ります) |
1986 | Yuko Igarashi | Non-album songs |
"Fushigi nanowa Sayonara no Hoho" (不思議なのはサヨならの方法) |
Iyo Matsumoto | Tenshi no Baka | |
"Baby's Rock" | Shohjo-Tai | Untouchable | |
"Yes It's My Heart" | |||
"Motto Charleston" (もっとチャールストン) | ABCD... | ||
"Misty Morning Stranger" | Shohjo-Tai Complete Singles Forever 1984-1999 | ||
Rubber Sole | |||
"Cheer Girl no Houkago" (チアガールの放課後) | 1987 | Zoo |
Bibliography
[edit]Date | Title | Publisher | Code |
---|---|---|---|
Feb 2008 | Kaiun Rikon (開運離婚) | Shogakukan | ISBN 4093637180 |
Selected filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Note |
---|---|---|---|
1979–1982 | Variety Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti Do | Host | |
1987–1988 | Gogo wa MaruMaru Omoikkiri TV | Host | |
2009, 2012 | Beat Takeshi no Zettai Micha ikenai TV | Narrator | Also performed "Flyday Chinatown" |
References
[edit]- ^ "泰葉 プロフィール". Yasuha official website (in Japanese). Retrieved 4 Jun 2017.
- ^ "【泰葉】プロフィール". エキサイトニュース. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
- ^ "泰葉『フライディ・チャイナタウン』". Idol.ne.jp. 2 January 2019. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
External links
[edit]- Yasuha Official Blog (in Japanese)
- Japanese women singer-songwriters
- Japanese singer-songwriters
- Japanese women pop singers
- Japanese women television personalities
- Singers from Tokyo
- 1961 births
- Living people
- People from Taitō
- 20th-century Japanese women singers
- 20th-century Japanese singers
- 21st-century Japanese women singers
- 21st-century Japanese singers