Anime song (アニメソング, anime songu, also shortened to anison (アニソン)) is a genre of music originating from Japanese pop music. Anime songs consist of theme, insert, and image songs for anime, manga, video game, and audio drama CD series, as well as any other song released primarily for the anime market, including music from Japanese voice actors.
The anime song genre was first defined as a musical category in the 1970s. It later gained popularity from the public when mainstream artists begin releasing songs as tie-ins for anime series. By the 1990s, it became redefined as a separate genre when companies began creating record labels that would exclusively produce anime songs for their series and artists. The increase in voice actors beginning in the mid-2000s led to growing market interest in the genre.
History
1930–1970: Early influences
The Dull Sword (1917), by Jun'ichi Kōuchi, is regarded as the earliest surviving animated film in Japan. Noburō Ōfuji's Kuroi Nyago (1929) is the first Japanese animated work to include music. The film includes characters dancing to a prerecorded song, retroactively seen as the prototype of anime songs.[1]
Following World War II, the 1950s and 1960s saw a revival in entertainment and cultural development.[1] In 1963, Astro Boy premiered and subsequently, the theme song "Theme of Astro Boy" became well-known to the Japanese public due to it being used as the departure song at Takadanobaba Station.[1] The song was also notable due to the lyrics being written by poet Shuntarō Tanikawa.[1]
1970–1980: Growing popularity of anime songs
Japan's economic growth in the 1970s led to more cultural development, and people who exclusively sang theme songs for anime were known as "anime song singers."[1] Despite the lack of public appearances from the singers, theme songs from the series Mazinger Z, Space Battleship Yamato, and Candy Candy became known to the Japanese public, even outside of fans who watched the shows.[1] At the same time, Mobile Suit Gundam voice actors Toshio Furukawa and Toru Furuya gained a large female fanbase with through Slapstick, a vocal unit consisting of voice actors from the show meant to its theme songs.[2][3] While anime theme songs originally used the name and settings from the series of which they were based, this led to the lyrics of anime songs being centered on the characters' thoughts and feelings for more universal appeal and allowing for context outside of the original animated work.[1]
1980–1990: Mainstream recognition
At the height of Japan's bubble economy, in the 1980s, musicians outside of the anime industry began performing theme songs for anime.[1] In 1984, the single "Ai Oboete Imasu ka", which was released for Macross under the character Lynn Minmay's name, charted at #7 on the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart.[1][4] Furthermore, Cat's Eye (1983) received widespread media attention for having Anri, a singer whose activities had no connection to the anime industry, perform its theme songs.[1] Likewise, TM Network, a band who were active outside of the anime industry, received media attention when their 1987 song "Get Wild" was released as the ending song to City Hunter.[1] As a result of the song's popularity, TM Network were invited to the 72nd Kohaku Uta Gassen to perform it.[1] From then on, mainstream artists releasing tie-in songs for anime became common.[1]
1990–2000: In-house production and modernization
Following the collapse of the bubble economy in Japan, labels exclusively dedicated to exclusively producing anime songs were formed, most notably King Records' Starchild label.[1] This was in part due the "Being Boom [ja]" phenomenon named after Being Inc., which gained a fanbase after their artists Zard and Maki Ohguro released songs that were well-received by the public.[1]Yoko Takahashi, who was part of the Starchild label, released "A Cruel Angel's Thesis" as the theme song for Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995), and the song's popularity led to audiences outside of anime fans to recognize it.[1] In addition, as popular music from Japan shifted from kayōkyoku to J-pop, anime song singers, such as Masami Okui, began incorporating J-pop sounds into her music.[1] Among others, voice actors such as Hekiru Shiina, Mariko Kouda, and Megumi Hayashibara were also active in singing in addition to voice acting.[2] Some voice actors also formed their own groups and perform theme songs to other anime series, such as Minami Takayama with Two-Mix.[5]
2000–2019: Voice actor boom
As more late-night anime series were being produced in the 2000s, Yui Horie, Yukari Tamura, and Nana Mizuki, who were signed with King Records, were produced and marketed as idol singers and voice actors by the record label.[2][7] During the mid-2000s, there was a "voice actor boom",[1] in addition to a period known as the "Idol Warring Period", a phenomenon named after a rapid growth in the idol industry.[8] Mizuki's "Eternal Blaze" reached #2 on the Oricon Weekly Single Charts in 2005, and shortly after, the release of "Hare Hare Yukai" in 2006 led to the "Haruhi boom" mainly because of the animated dance sequence in the show's ending.[1] In the following years, there was a substantial increase of voice actors in anime, and anime songs as a whole became more widely known to the general public.[1] The anime song industry shifted to recruit young girls who were able to have an "idol" presence, naming Riisa Naka, Koharu Kusumi, and Aya Hirano as examples.[7]
In 2010, Ho-kago Tea Time, a fictional band from the series K-On!, became the first anime characters to receive simultaneous #1 and #2 rankings on the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart with the release of both their singles.[9] In the following years, idol-themed multimedia projects, such as Love Live!, The Idolmaster, and Uta no Prince-sama, became popular.[10][11]Billboard Japan launched the Billboard Japan Hot Animation chart on December 1, 2010 exclusively for anime and video game music releases.[12]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2023)
Performers
This is a list of singers and bands who primarily perform anime songs, including groups created from media mix anime projects. This list does not count singers or bands who release incidental songs for the genre, nor group names that the voice actors are credited under solely for performing the theme songs in the anime they are starring in.
This is a list of songwriters who primarily compose and produce anime songs. This list does not count composers who produce incidental releases for the genre.
^Anu; Katrin (March 8, 2009). "Toru Furuya at Desucon". Japan Music Entertainment. Archived from the original on April 21, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
^Tai, Hiroki (February 15, 2015). "最近よく聞く"2.5次元"、その定義とは?". Oricon (in Japanese). Archived from the original on January 3, 2019. Retrieved January 16, 2019.
^"ビルボードジャパン新チャート提供開始のお知らせ" [Announcement regarding the beginning the Billboard Japan Charts]. Kyodo News (in Japanese). December 1, 2010. Archived from the original on June 24, 2012. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
^ abcd"2019年、アニソンアプリ「アニュータ」で最も再生されたのは誰だ!? 年間ランキング大賞「ANiUTa AWARD」発表" [Who was replayed the most on the anime song app AniUta in 2019?! Announcement of the yearly ranking award Aniuta Award]. Anime! Anime! (in Japanese). December 20, 2019. Archived from the original on May 11, 2022. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
^Oda, Junji (November 3, 2021). "水樹奈々、上坂すみれ、内田真礼……貫禄の歌声とクリエイターの手腕味わえる女性声優の最新作" [Nana Mizuki, Sumire Uesaka, Maaya Uchida... the latest works where you can taste the voice actresses' dignified singing and the creative skills]. Real Sound (in Japanese). Archived from the original on March 24, 2022. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
^"和田光司" [Kōji Wada]. Solid Vox. Archived from the original on April 14, 2016. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
^"声優ユニットTrefle、デビュー作で「チェンクロ」とコラボ" [Voice actor unit Trefle collaborates with Chain Chronicle for their debut work]. Natalie (in Japanese). October 22, 2013. Archived from the original on May 11, 2022. Retrieved November 19, 2019.