Mariya Takeuchi

Singer

Popular As Miyabi, MAKO (as a lyricist)

Birthday March 20, 1955

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Kizukiminami, Taisha-machi, Hikawa-gun (Current: Izumo-shi), Shimane Prefecture, Japan

Age 68 years old

Nationality Japan

#25844 Most Popular

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Mariya Takeuchi (竹内 まりや) is a Japanese singer and songwriter.

Regarded as an influential figure in the city pop genre, she is one of the best-selling music artists in Japan, having sold over 16 million records, and has received several accolades.

Her husband is Tatsuro Yamashita, a singer-songwriter and record producer.

Takeuchi was born in Taisha, Hikawa district, now the city of Izumo, Shimane, and attended Keio University.

1877

She grew up in the family Shinise Ryokan (Japanese long-established inn) business by the name of Takenoya, that her paternal great grandfather Shigezo Takeuchi (竹内繁蔵) founded in 1877.

Her family always played records from all over the world.

She had already learned to play piano and guitar by third grade, but the Beatles left an impression that inspired her to travel.

1970

Following the success of her ventures throughout the late 1970s and 1980s, Takeuchi began releasing albums less frequently, her latest release being in 2014 as she shifted her focus to work and releasing standalone singles.

From the late 1970s to the early 1980s, she recorded five albums and several singles.

Those recordings featured dozens of prominent Japanese and North American songwriters, instrumentalists and producers, including Kazuhiko Katō, Tetsuji Hayashi, Shigeru Suzuki, Masamichi Sugi, Takashi Matsumoto, Al Capps, Peter Allen, David Lasley, Alan O'Day, David Foster, Jim Keltner, Jay Graydon, Steve Lukather, Jeff Porcaro, David Hungate, and a fellow RCA artist and her future partner and husband, Tatsuro Yamashita.

1972

In 1972, for her third year of high school, she studied in Rock Falls, Illinois, United States, as an international exchange student through the AFS Intercultural Programs.

Her nickname was Mako, as one of the AFS yearbooks has a caption that reads Mariya "Mako" Takeuchi.

1974

She entered the Japanese Keio University in 1974, majoring in English literature and won a nationwide English recitation contest by The Japan Times in the spring of that year.

1978

She made her singing debut after signing with the RCA record label in 1978, with whom she released her debut album Beginning (Mariya Takeuchi album), which peaked at No. 17 on Oricon Charts.

Takeuchi joined the music club of her university and there she was invited to participate in Masamichi Sugi (杉真理)'s recordings and in March 1978 so-called the omnibus album Loft Sessions (ロフト・セッションズ) recordings.

In August that year she signed up with the RCA recording label, and in November her debut single "Modotte oide, Watashi no Jikan" (戻っておいで・私の時間), and her debut album Beginning (Mariya Takeuchi album) were released.

1979

She then released four albums between 1979 and 1981, all of which obtained commercial success, including the 1980 album Love Songs (Mariya Takeuchi album), which became her first work to peak at No. 1 on Oricon Charts.

The 1979 singles "Dream of You: Lemon Lime no Aoi Kaze" (ドリーム・オブ・ユー〜レモンライムの青い風〜) and September (Mariya Takeuchi single) were hits, and with that she won the 1979 Japan Record Awards, Tokyo Music Festival, Japan Music Awards, Shinjuku Music Festival, and Ginza Music Festival best new artist awards as a singer.

1980

The 1980 single "Fushigi na Peach Pie" (不思議なピーチパイ) was also another hit.

One of her songs from the 1980 album Miss M (Miss M), "Heart to Heart" (music by Roger Nichols), was given English lyrics and a new title, "Now".

1981

Takeuchi then announced she would go on a temporary hiatus in 1981, terminating her contract with RCA records.

Since 1981, every single she has released has charted on the Oricon Charts.

Takeuchi has had one song "Apple Papple Princess" (アップル・パップル・プリンセス) (1981) that appear on the NHK program Minna no Uta.

At the end of 1981, after the release of her fifth album Portrait (PORTRAIT), she announced she was going to take a break for a while and paused holding concerts and new releases, and got married six months later.

While taking a break she continued composing for numerous different idols and singers such as Naoko Kawai, Hiroko Yakushimaru, Yukiko Okada, Akina Nakamori, Miho Nakayama, Hiromi Iwasaki, Masahiko Kondo, among many others.

Several of these songs scored top-ten on the Oricon, such as "Kenka wo Yamete" (けんかをやめて) and Invitation (Naoko Kawai song) performed by Naoko Kawai, "Dreaming Girl: Koi, Hajimemashite" (-Dreaming Girl- 恋、はじめまして) performed by Yukiko Okada, and "Iro: White Blend" (色・ホワイトブレンド) performed by Miho Nakayama.

Takeuchi has often re-recorded those songs for her own album.

"Eki" (駅), a song originally written for the album by Akina Nakamori, became known by the composer's recorded version, and had been covered by many artists.

"Genki wo Dashite", a song first recorded by Hiroko Yakushimaru, is recognized as one of Takeuchi's notable compositions.

1982

She married fellow musician Tatsuro Yamashita in April 1982.

They have one daughter.

1983

It was recorded by the Carpenters, released in 1983, and was the last recording by Karen Carpenter before her death.

1984

Three years later, Takeuchi and her husband Tatsuro Yamashita signed with Moon Records, and she made her comeback with her sixth studio album Variety in 1984, which was released internationally and shot her to mainstream success, and peaked at No. 1 on Oricon Charts.

She has stayed with the Moon record label, working with the different branches since signing in 1984 and since 1998 has been signed with Warner Music Japan, with whom she released the single "Inochi no Uta" (いのちの歌) in 2012, for which she re-recorded in 2020; the latter of which charted at No. 1 on Oricon Charts, making her the oldest Japanese singer to achieve a No. 1 single.

Takeuchi was born in Taisha in the Hikawa district of Shimane Prefecture in Japan.

Since her return to the Japanese music industry in 1984, she has recorded seven successful studio albums that mainly consist of her self-written songs, and all of them had reached No. 1 on the Japanese Oricon chart.

As a singer-songwriter, she has produced eight top-ten hit singles on the Oricon chart, including "Single Again" (シングル・アゲイン), "Kokuhaku" (告白), "Junai Rhapsody" (純愛ラプソディ), "Kon'ya wa Hearty Party" (今夜はHearty Party), and her only No. 1 hit "Camouflage" (カムフラージュ).

1985

The track "Plastic Love" was released in 1985 as a single, and became a surprise hit outside of Japan in 2017, after a YouTube upload of the song went viral.

2003

The song was later covered by Hitomi Shimatani in 2003, and became a moderate hit.

2010

The song has since attained a cult following and is seen as the staple in a revival of interest in city pop in the late 2010s.