Performance

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Nexus

637K streams

636,985

Portraits in Time

384K streams

384,005

Nexus (The Xtrasolar Treatment)

124.7K streams

124,671

Soulception

114.8K streams

114,750

The Cosmic Laws / Fade Away

97.2K streams

97,177

ENSO

73.5K streams

73,522

Episodes in Color

69.5K streams

69,525

My Ever Changing Moods

63.6K streams

63,644

Sunshine After The Rain

31.7K streams

31,708

ROUTES

13.8K streams

13,787

Biography

Monday Michiru stands as one of Japan's finest soul and R&B singers of the 1990s and whose cosmopolitan sensibility and mixed nationality have made her stand out among her contemporaries. Regarded as one of the pioneers of Japanese club music, she was born in 1963 in Tokyo to pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi and alto sax jazzman Charlie Mariano but raised in the United States. Michiru originally kept her father's last name, then briefly adopted Michiru Akiyoshi as a screen name in the mid-'80s, but settled on her current name at the time of her debut album (Michiru is her middle name). Originally, she was an actress and first came to the public's attention when she was awarded a prize at 1987's Yokohama film festival for her performance in Hikaru Onna. But, come 1991, her attention had gone to composing music and performing, appearing in small Tokyo jazz clubs and releasing her first album Mangetsu. While it didn't sell millions, it did bring her to the attention of Tokyo's burgeoning dance and acid jazz scene and soon she was appearing on records by Mondo Grosso, DJ Krush, Kyoto Jazz Massive, and United Future Organization, and easily slotted into the model of the soul chanteuse, such as Jhelisa or Cassandra Wilson. Signed to Kitty Records, she released an album a year, including 1994's Maiden Japan and 1995's Jazz Brat, a maturation of her sound. Songs were still funky, but Michiru dabbled in hip-hop, rap, jazz ballads, Latin, and rock. Her lyrics are often probing examinations of culture in Japan, especially as it pertains to women. In 1997, she left Kitty for the larger label Polydor and also turned to composing and producing for other acts, including Yoko Oginome and UA, and occasionally appeared on the club circuit as a DJ. Her album Double Image is considered by many to be her finest works. In 1999, she ditched the heavy production for a stripped-down acoustic sound on Optimista. In 2001, she went on hiatus to start a family. ~ Ted Mills, Rovi