Juju (singer)

Juju (ジュジュ) (stylized as JUJU) (born February 14, 1976) is a Japanese jazz singer. She is represented by Sony Music Associated Records Inc.

Biography

She currently resides in New York City. She dreamed of being a jazz singer while growing up in Kyoto, and participated in all sorts of music-related activities. At age 18, she left for the US alone. While in New York, she was very taken with the "New York sound," including jazz, R&B, hip-hop, soul, Latin music, and house. Around 2001, Juju began to be featured in a number of works by other artists. In 2002, she provided music for the film Kyōki no Sakura. In 2004, she debuted with her first single "Hikaru no Naka e". The same year, concurrent with her musical activities in New York, she started performing live in Japan. When her third single, "Kiseki o Nozomu nara", was released, it topped the USEN charts and remained on the chart for a record length of 22 weeks. At this point, while she received support from a small group of listeners, she remained mostly unknown. On August 23, 2008, with the release of "Kimi no Subete ni", a collaboration between Spontania and Juju, she broke out onto the Japanese popular music scene, with the single receiving over 2.5 million downloads. Again, on November 26, 2008, another collaboration with Spontania named "Sunao ni Naretara" earned her even more fame, with the song receiving 2.2 million downloads.In 2010, Juju released her third album called Juju and it won the Excellence Album Award at the 52nd Japan Record Awards.

Juju (rapper)

Julius Sarisalmi, professionally known as Juju, is a Finnish rapper. To date, he has released four solo albums, the latest of which in June 2014. Juju has also appeared as a featured guest on songs by such artists as Julma-Henri, Teflon Brothers and Aste.

Selected discography

Solo albums

Singles

References


Juju (Gass album)

Juju (1970) was the first album recorded by the rock band Gass and featured guitarist Peter Green, who had just left Fleetwood Mac at this time. The album was released by Polydor (catalogue reference 283-022 A) and withdrawn soon after it was released to retail outlets and re-issued entitled Gass

Track listing

  • "Kulu Se Mama" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "Holy Woman" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "Yes I Can" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "Juju" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "Black Velvet" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "House for Sale" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "Cold Light of Day" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • "Cool Me Down" (McClean, Harper, Tench)
  • Track times were not included on this album.

    Personnel

  • Robert Tench- guitar, vocals, organ, bass
  • Michael Piggott - violin, guitar
  • Derek Austin - organ, piano, flute, percussion
  • Delisle Harper - electric and acoustic basses, percussion
  • Godfrey McLean - drums, vocals, percussion, congas
  • Other musicians

  • Junior Kerr-guitar
  • Errol McLean-congas
  • Humphrey Okah-sax
  • Alan Roskans-lead guitar
  • Memory

    In psychology, memory is the process in which information is encoded, stored, and retrieved. Encoding allows information from the outside world to be sensed in the form of chemical and physical stimuli. In the first stage the information must be changed so that it may be put into the encoding process. Storage is the second memory stage or process. This entails that information is maintained over short periods of time. Finally the third process is the retrieval of information that has been stored. Such information must be located and returned to the consciousness. Some retrieval attempts may be effortless due to the type of information, and other attempts to remember stored information may be more demanding for various reasons.

    From an information processing perspective there are three main stages in the formation and retrieval of memory:

  • Encoding or registration: receiving, processing and combining of received information
  • Storage: creation of a permanent record of the encoded information in short term or long term memory
  • Memories (1995 film)

    Memories (also Otomo Katsuhiro's Memories) is a 1995 Japanese animated science fiction anthology film with Katsuhiro Otomo as executive producer, and based on three of his manga short stories. The film is composed of three shorts: "Magnetic Rose" (彼女の想いで Kanojo no Omoide), directed by Studio 4°C co-founder Kōji Morimoto and written by Satoshi Kon; "Stink Bomb" (最臭兵器 Saishū-heiki), directed by Tensai Okamura of Darker than Black fame and also written by Kon, and "Cannon Fodder" (大砲の街 Taihō no Machi), written and directed by Otomo himself.

    Plot

    Magnetic Rose

    The Corona, a deep space salvage freighter, is out on a mission when it encounters a distress signal and responds to it. They come upon a spaceship graveyard orbiting a giant space station. The crew's two engineers, Heintz and Miguel, enter it to get a closer look.

    Once inside, they discover an opulent European interior and several furnished rooms (in varying states of decay), but find no signs of life. They discover that the station belongs to a once famous opera diva named Eva Friedel who disappeared after the murder of her fiancé, Carlo Rambaldi, a fellow singer. Continuing the search for the source of the signal, the engineers split up, with each experiencing paranormal encounters, including strange noises and visions of Eva. Miguel enters the dilapidated underbelly of the station, and in a cavernous chamber he finds a broken piano playing the distress signal. He begins to hallucinate and Eva suddenly runs up to kiss him.

    Memory (disambiguation)

    Memory is an organism's ability to store, retain, and recall information.

    Memory or Memories may also refer to:

    Music

  • Memories (radio network), or Unforgettable Favorites
  • Albums

  • Memories (Barbra Streisand album)
  • Memories (Doc Watson album)
  • Memories (The Vogues album)
  • Memories: The '68 Comeback Special, an Elvis Presley compilation album
  • Memories: The Best of Elaine Paige, an Elaine Paige compilation album
  • Memories Pat Boone album
  • Songs

  • "Memory" (song), a song from Cats
  • "Memory", 2004 single from the Sugarcult album Palm Trees and Power Lines
  • "Memory", a 1912 art song by the classical composer John Ireland on lyrics by the poet William Blake
  • "Memory", a 1959 art song by the classical composer Ned Rorem on lyrics by the poet Theodore Roethke
  • "Memories" (1915 song), by Egbert Van Alstyne and Gustave Kahn
  • "Memories" (Hugh Hopper song) - a song variously covered by Daevid Allen, Robert Wyatt and Material featuring Whitney Houston
  • "Memories" (David Guetta song)
  • "Memories" (Harold Faltermeyer song)
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

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    ... up against the best in recent memory by the elites who have preceded her on CIF-SS finalists, such as Juju Watkins, Charisma Osborne, Brooke Demetre, Londynn Jones, Jayda Curry, and Kennedy Smith.
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