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Artist
Koichi Sugii (杉井幸一) (1906-1942) was a Japanese bandleader, composer, arranger, conductor, singer, accordionist and recording artist. He skilfully bridged Eastern and Western styles, combining American orchestral jazz with Japanese pop and Chinese folk music to create a sophisticated and melodic hybrid with broad appeal. Sugii was born in Tokyo in 1906. His mother sang traditional Japanese music while accompanying herself on the samisen, a three-stringed instrument. An early familiarity with his country's native folk songs later inspired Sugii to arrange these melodies in jazz settings. Sugii took piano lessons from a Canadian teacher, and became an ardent admirer of Western classical traditions, jazz, and film music. In 1930, after graduating from Tokyo Imperial University, he was hired by the Osaka merchant shipping company, which assigned him to Buenos Aires. In Argentina the young business executive became fascinated by musical trends, especially the tango. Convinced his true interests were in music, Sugii returned to Japan in 1932 and found work composing and recording for a film studio. In 1935 he joined Sakurai Kiyoshi's Sakurai y Su Orquesta, a Latin-influenced band which specialized in tangos. In 1936, under contract to the King Records label, Sugii made his first recordings as a solo accordionist and singer. In 1938, as a staff arranger, he masterminded a series of orchestral recordings which launched a "Salon Music" vogue. The sessions were released under a va

Japanese Jazz & Salon Music, 1936-1941, Vol. 1

Japanese Jazz & Salon Music, 1936-1941, Vol. 3

Japanese Jazz & Salon Music, 1936-1941, Vol. 2
Canton-no-Hanaurimusume
Kojo-no-Tsuki
Kagoshima-Ohara-Bushi
Japanese Jazz Salon Music, 1936-1941, Vol. 1
Kushimoto-Bushi
Sado Okesa
Japanese Jazz & Salon Music
Hahako-Sendou-Uta
Oiwake