Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
arts

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

13th Japan Record Awards

1971 Japanese music awards ceremony


1971 Japanese music awards ceremony

FieldValue
name13th Japan Record Awards
dateDecember 31, 1971
venueImperial Garden Theater, Tokyo
hostsKeizo Takahashi, Yoko Yamamoto
networkTBS
previous12th
mainJapan Record Awards
next14th

The 13th Annual Japan Record Awards took place at the Imperial Garden Theater in Chiyoda, Tokyo, on December 31, 1971, starting at 7:00PM JST. The primary ceremonies were televised in Japan on TBS.

Award winners

Japan Record Award

  • Kiyohiko Ozaki for "Mata Au Hi Made"
    • Lyricist: Yū Aku
    • Composer: Kyōhei Tsutsumi
    • Arranger: Kyōhei Tsutsumi
    • Record Company: Philips Records/Nippon Phonogram

Best Vocalist

  • Shinichi Mori for "Ofukurosan"
    • Awarded again after 2 years, 2nd best vocalist award. Best New Artist
  • Rumiko Koyanagi for "Watashi No Jyoukamachi"

Vocalist Award

  • Yuuko Nagisa for "Saihate Bojou"
  • Hiroshi Itsuki for "Yokohama Tasogare"
  • Tokiko Kato for "Shiretoko Ryojou"
    • Awarded after 2 years, 2nd vocalist award. New Artist Award
  • Saori Minami for "17-sai"
  • Simmons for "Koibito Mo Inainoni"
  • Ouyang Fei Fei for "Ame No Midousuji"
  • Naoki Hongou for "Moeru Koibito"

General Public Award

  • Masaaki Sakai for "Saraba Koibito"
  • Kōji Tsuruta for "Kizudarake No Jinsei" Composer Award
  • Kyōhei Tsutsumi for "Manatsu No Dekigoto" and "Ame Ga Yandara"
    • Singer: Miki Hirayama and Yukiji Asaoka
    • Awarded again after 2 years, 2nd composer award Arranger Award
  • Katsuhisa Hattori for "Hana No Märchen"
    • Singer: Dark Ducks

Lyricist Award

  • Osamu Kitayama for "Children Who Don't Know War" and Bouken
    • Singer: Jiros and Yumi Makiba

Special Award

  • Noriko Awaya
    • Song: Wakare No Blues Planning Award
  • JVC and Shoichi Ozawa for "Document-Nihon No Horo Gei"
    • Awarded again after 3 years, Ozawa's 3rd planning award. Children's Song Award
  • Hibari Junior Chorus for "Jinjin"
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 13th Japan Record Awards — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report