Hideki Saijo
Hideki Saijō 西城 秀樹 | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Birth name | Tatsuo Kimoto (木本 龍雄, Kimoto Tatsuo) |
| Born | April 13, 1955 Hiroshima, Japan |
| Died | May 16, 2018 (aged 63) Yokohama, Japan |
| Genres |
|
| Occupation(s) | Vocalist, musician, composer, actor |
| Years active | 1972-2018 |
Hideki Saijō (西城 秀樹, Saijō Hideki, originally Tatsuo Kimoto (木本 龍雄, Kimoto Tatsuo); April 13, 1955 – May 16, 2018) was a Japanese singer, composer, actor, drummer, voice actor, and television and radio show host. Due to his numerous pioneering achievements throughout Asia in the 1970s and 1980s, he is considered an icon amongst Shōwa era idols.
With on-stage vivacity and highly acclaimed vocals as his defining trademarks, Saijō quickly came to dominate the Japanese charts of the 1970s. He was consistently promoted as part of the Shin-Gosanke (新御三家, "New Big Three") idol trio alongside two other soloists who debuted around the same time: Goro Noguchi and Hiromi Go. Almost seven years into his career, his 28th single "YOUNG MAN (Y.M.C.A.)" (a Japanese cover of the Village People song of the same name) became a social phenomenon in Japan, selling over 1.8 million copies.