hitomi
Birth name Hitomi Furuya (古谷仁美 Furuya Hitomi?)
Also known as hitomi, Hitomi Uesugi (上杉仁美 Uesugi Hitomi?)
Born (1976-01-26) January 26, 1976 (age 36)
Tochigi, Japan
Origin Kanagawa
Genres Pop, rock, electronica
Occupations Singer-songwriter, model, actress
Years active 1994–present
Labels Avex Trax
Avex Trax/Love Life Records
Maximum 10
Website www.hitomilovelife.net

Hitomi Furuya (古谷仁美 Furuya Hitomi?, born January 26, 1976) better known by her stagename hitomi, is a Japanese singer-songwriter. She began her career as model, but after meeting Tetsuya Komuro he began managing her career as a pop singer. In 1998 she left the "Komuro Family"[1] and started working with other musicians and producers, oriented to other musical genres such as pop rock, and more recently to electropop.

Contents

Biography [link]

Early life [link]

Born Hitomi Furuya (古谷仁美 Furuya Hitomi?) in Tochigi, Japan, Hitomi's family relocated to Kawasaki, Kanagawa Prefecture when she was a child. Consequently Hitomi always identified herself as a girl from Kanagawa. hitomi was an enthusiastic athlete throughout her childhood, playing baseball, soccer, and basketball, as well as an avid reader of manga. When hitomi was 16 years old, she was spotted and approached by a scout from a modelling agency. Hitomi signed a short modelling contract and began appearing in magazines while she was still in high school.

In 1993, then 17 years old, Furuya was spotted by eminent Avex music producer Tetsuya Komuro at an audition. Komuro signed Furuya to Avex, put Furuya through vocal training, and decided that she should use an all-lowercase 'hitomi' as her stage name. The following year, in November 1994, hitomi released her debut single, "Let's Play Winter", through Avex Trax, to which she wrote the lyrics. Since then, Hitomi has been the lyricist for almost all of her songs.

Debut and success [link]

While her first two singles, "Let's Play Winter" and "We Are "Lonely Girl"" were considerable failures, her third single "Candy Girl" was used as the theme for a Kodak CM, and secured a top 20 spot on the Japanese Oricon music chart. Subsequent singles "By Myself" and "Busy Now" established hitomi, barely out of her teens, as one to watch in Japanese entertainment. By Myself, hitomi's second album released in 1996, became her first musical work to debut at number one on the Oricon charts, and selling more than 800,000 copies it became her biggest selling album to date.[2]

After three studio albums and twelve singles, Komuro and hitomi went their separate ways in 1998, and in[1] 1999 she released her first greatest hits album, entitled H, that peaked at number one on the Japanese charts and sold more than a 500 thousand copies.[1]

In 2000, she gained much public attention after her single "Love 2000" was used as the image song of runner Naoko Takahashi, who became popular in Japan after winning the gold medal in the 2000 Summer Olympics. This helped the song to get a lot of airplay, and the song became a commercial success, giving hitomi at the end of that year the chance to perform the song at the annual Kōhaku Uta Gassen.[2] Her Love Life album released around that same time also caught attention within the Japanese entertainment because of its cover: hitomi appeared naked covering her breasts with her arms.[3]

During some routine medical examination, she seemed to have some abnormalities, and after further examinations hitomi was discovered to have a small ovarian tumor. Since it was a benign one, it was easy to remove, and hitomi went to a successful surgical remove in late November 2002. hitomi could return to her normal activities very quickly, and in December 1, 2002 she married a businessman.[4] They got divorced in November 2007, and never had children.[5] During this period as a married woman, her legal name changed to Hitomi Uesugi (上杉仁美 Uesugi Hitomi?).

2004–2009 [link]

After a one year and a half hiatus,[2] in May 2004 hitomi released a new studio album, Traveler. The concert tour she subsequently embarked upon was a huge success, and she played to packed arenas at almost every stop. As the 10th anniversary of hitomi's debut came in 2005, she opened her own record label, Love Life Records, which functioned as a subdivision of Avex. The first single to be released from the label was "Japanese Girl", her 28th single, which also marked a change in hitomi's style and looks, much more modern dance-oriented and sexy, than any of her previous works.

In 2007, she got her first lead role in the movie Akumu Tantei, and also participated in her first musical: Waiting For The Sun: Tenkimachi. On December 5, 2007 hitomi's singles compilation album Peace was released to celebrate her 13th anniversary.[2] On July 11, 2008, hitomi revealed on her blog that she had got married again, this time to actor Masayoshi Haneda, and that she was 4 months pregnant. She released a new digital single called "Fight for Your Run☆" in August 2008.[6] On December 23, 2008 she gave birth to a baby girl.[1][7]

After a year on hiatus, hitomi released a new single, "World! Wide! Love!", on May 20, 2009, and a month later she released her ninth studio album, Love Life 2. This album was a spiritual successor to her 2000 album Love Life, with hitomi once again nude on the cover of it, but this time pregnant with her child.[3]

2011: Departure from Avex major label and indie start [link]

hitomi's last single in the Avex label, "Umarete Kurete Arigato/Smile World", was released on February 16, 2011. This month she also inaugurated her own baby clothing brand called PomiPomi.[8] On March 28, 2011 it was announced on hitomi's official website that two new songs, "Special" and "Guru Maze Yeah!" would be used in the NHK educative cartoon Hana Kappa, as opening and ending themes respectively, although these songs were never officially released.[9]

On April 5, 2011, it was announced that hitomi had left the Avex major label and had signed to Maximum 10, an independent label, although still affiliated to the Avex company, and owned by post-hardcore band Fact. On April 27, hitomi's tenth studio album and first indie album, Spirit, was released, and featured mainly productions of western artists such as Rivers Cuomo from Weezer, Chuck Comeau and Pierre Bouvier from Simple Plan, and Gabe Saporta from Cobra Starship. In June, hitomi started her Live Tour 2011: Spirit, her first live tour in five years.[10]

Despite of not being part of the major Avex label, hitomi still participated as some of the main artist in the tenth anniversary version of A-Nation. She was part of the line-up of the concerts held in Aichi, Osaka, and Tokio. Her performance was later included in the DVD of A-Nation released in late 2011. In August 2011, Japanese model and occasional singer Mini made a remake of hitomi's hit single "Candy Girl", which was released as a digital single in September. On November 30, 2011, hitomi released a new mini album entitled Special, in which her songs featured in the NHK educational program Hana Kappa were included. This became her last release published by the Avex major label. hitomi also collaborated with fellow label mates from Maximum 10, Sfpr, in the song "Feeder" which was included in their debut album released in January 1, 2012.[11]

Discography [link]

Studio albums [link]

References [link]

External links [link]


https://wn.com/Hitomi

Hitomi (voice actress)

Hitomi (ひと美, born February 15, 1967), is a Japanese voice actress from Osaka, Japan. She has also done voice work, especially in eroge, under the name Minami Hokuto (北都 南 Hokuto Minami). As of July 2009, she has been in over 400 works. She is married to fellow voice actor Kazuya Ichijō.

Adult Roles

Eroge

1998

  • Kyouhaku (Reika Takatsukasa)
  • Magical Kanon (Sayaka Mizuki)
  • 1999

  • Little My Maid (Hina)
  • Ingoku no Gakuen Biseito Choukyou (Rena Anemiya)
  • Rensa ~Uragiri no Kusari~ (Moeki Ito)
  • 2000

  • Rasen Kairou (Aoi Mizuyo)
  • Shiyouzumi ~Condom~ (Shiori Kusanagi)
  • Shin Ruriiro No Yuki ~Furimukeba Tonari ni~ (Yurino Shinozaki)
  • Sumire (Keiko Fujieda)
  • Teito no Yuri (Saori Kojima)
  • Dennou M Dorei - Reimi (Reimi Kazato)
  • Lens no Mukougawa... (Yoriko Takaoka)
  • Ry?jokuki (Miki Matsubara)
  • ~Miboujin~ Niku Dorei (Yuki Takazawa)
  • Triangle Heart 3 ~Sweet Songs Forever~ (Nanoha Takamachi)
  • Dorei Ichiba (Cecilia)
  • Castle Fantasia ~Seima Taisen~ (Renard Theron)
  • 2001

  • Gibo (Mio Shinohara)
  • Flutter of Birds ~Tori-tachi no Hane Bataki~ (???)
  • Hitomi (album)

    Hitomi is an album by American fingerstyle guitarist and composer John Fahey, released in 2000. It was also issued on the Cargo label and reissued in 2004 on the Important Records label. Hitomi was Fahey's last official release prior to his death in 2001.

    History

    Hitomi continues Fahey's interest in sound collages and experimental music. It was his last official release prior to his death in 2001.

    "Hitomi Smiles" is an unreleased song from the sessions for Old Girlfriends and Other Horrible Memories and "A History of Tokyo Rail Traction" is by the John Fahey Trio from a live session for KBOO Radio. Fahey would go on to release two more albums with the Trio; John Fahey Trio KBOO and John Fahey Trio, Vol. One.

    Track listing

    All songs by John Fahey unless otherwise noted.

  • "Delta Flight 53"
  • "Despair"
  • "Hitomi"
  • "Tanaka Jun"
  • "East Meets West"
  • "Hitomi Smiles"
  • "The Dance of the Cat People"
  • "A History of Tokyo Rail Traction/Delta Flight 54" (Fahey, Tim Knight, Rob Scrivener)
  • Personnel

    Podcasts:

    ひと美

    hitomi

    ALBUMS

    TRAVELLER

    Released 2004

    Hitomi

    ALBUMS

    仁美

    ALBUMS

    黒石ひとみ

    Hitomi

    ALBUMS

    PLAYLIST TIME:
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