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あなたになりたかった

72.5M streams

72,507,495

Ken Hirai Singles Best Collection UtaB...

55.5M streams

55,453,082

SENTIMENTALovers

38.3M streams

38,300,815

POP STAR

27.3M streams

27,301,495

gaining through losing

10.6M streams

10,581,374

JAPANESE SINGER

6.2M streams

6,201,228

LIFE is...

5.4M streams

5,350,371

LIFE is... - another story

3.3M streams

3,334,273

Ken's Bar II

3M streams

3,009,513

LAKuEN

2.7M streams

2,707,667

Biography

Ken Hirai's steady, competent falsetto, good looks, and -- most importantly -- predilection for classic R&B and soul, which he mixes with jazz, funk, and hip-hop, made him a top-league feature on the Japanese scene and throughout East Asia, with the total amount of CDs he's sold being close to 14 million. His career began in the early '90s: in 1993, Hirai, still a student, won an audition at Sony and got a deal with the label. He started big -- his first two singles, "Precious Junk" and "Katahou Zutsu No Earphone" (both 1995), were used in TV dramas -- but the sales of his two albums, Un-Balanced (1995) and Stare At (1996), were modest, and so Hirai proceeded with caution, dropping only two singles from 1997 to 1999. He returned in glory in 2000, when his third studio album, The Changing Same, sold 1.26 million copies (that year's "Rakuen" single added 500,000 more), getting him gigs at MTV Summer Summit in Taiwan and even the R&B mecca of the Apollo Theater in New York, with Hirai being the first Japanese performer to play the venue. The single "Kiss of Life" (2001) was used in the successful TV series Love Revolution, and the album Gaining Through Losing sold 1.5 million copies in all of Asia. Hirai also wooed the club crowd with his remix CD KH Re-mixed Up 1 (2001), and continued to advance internationally in 2002-2003, appearing in Los Angeles with Babyface (he also wrote the song "Missin' You: It Will Break My Heart" for Hirai); releasing "Ooki Na Furudokei" (2002), the Japanese cover of "My Grandfather's Clock," which became a smash hit (772,000 copies sold); sharing the stage with Lauryn Hill at the FIFA World Cup concert; and playing an MTV Unplugged in New York in 2003. He also had a prolific streak in the studio, releasing Life Is... and Ken's Bar in 2003 and Sentimental Lovers in 2004 (Ken's Bar consisted of covers of classic jazz and blues numbers). Sentimental Lovers sold 1.66 million copies and spawned the super-hit "Hitomi Wo Tojite," which hit number one on the Japanese yearly singles chart. However, that was followed by an extensive break: Hirai only released two singles in 2005 and 2006, although his Utabaka collection (November 2005) sold 2.1 million copies, becoming the top-selling album of 2006. Hirai returned to active mode in 2007, although his singles "Elegy" and "Kimi No Suki Na Toko," unsurprisingly, didn't chart as high as their predecessors, even if still managing to shift about 100,000 units each. In 2008 Hirai released his first double A-side, Canvas/Kimi Wa Su.te.ki, of which "Canvas" was featured in the live action adaptation of the hit manga series Honey and Clover. The album Fakin' Pop, his first in four years, came out in 2008, reaching number two and selling 330,000 copies. ~ Alexey Eremenko, Rovi