May J.
May J. 橋本芽生 | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | May Jamileh Hashimoto |
Also known as | May J. |
Born | Yokohama, Japan | June 20, 1988
Genres | |
Occupations | |
Years active | 2006–present |
Labels |
|
Website | http://www.may-j.com |
May Jamileh Hashimoto (橋本 芽生, Hashimoto Mei), better known by her stage name May J., is a Japanese pop and R&B singer who made her major label debut under Sony Music Japan on July 12, 2006, with her first mini-album All My Girls. She was born to an Iranian mother and Japanese father.[1]
Early life
May J. was born as May Hashimoto on June 20, 1988, in Yokohama, Japan. The "J" in her name comes from the common Arabic and Arabic girl's name "Jamileh" (Template:Lang-fa), meaning "beautiful".[1] She knows how to speak four languages, including Persian, Japanese, English and Spanish.[2]
May J.'s Iranian mother refused to acknowledge her Persian roots due to perceived negativity towards Iranians in Japan and May J. grew up forbidden to speak the Persian language. Believing she was American, she discovered her true identity on a chance overhearing of a conversation between her mother and grandmother.[1] During her formative middle school years she began listening to Iranian singers Googoosh and Afshin and has later said she hopes to debut in Iran.[1] In the 2013.06.23 J-MELO in Turkey Part 2 episode she said, that she is a part Turkish.[3]
At the age of 14, May J. was successful at a Sony Music Japan audition and soon signed onto Sony Music. While waiting to make her major label debut, May J. was a dancer for Aaron Carter's Japanese concert and was featured on the track Luyva: Another Episode from Sphere of Influence's album Big Deal, credited simply as May.
A childhood fan of Christina Aguilera and Whitney Houston she then came to admire Canadian rock singer Avril Lavigne, winning a MTV lookalike contest as Avril.[1] She began listening to R&B while studying at the American School in Japan, from which she graduated in 2007 following a period of balancing her studies and her singing career.
Career
2006–2009: Debut and development
Released July 12, 2006, under Neosite Discs, the hip-hop division of Sony's Ki/oon Records, the music of her debut mini-album All My Girls was billed by her label as "Jennifer Lopez/Beyoncé style music which has never before existed in Japan."[4]
To celebrate the 10 year anniversary of Neosite Discs, the single "I Say Yeah!" was released on October 4, 2006, as a collaboration by all 5 of the label's signed artists.[5] The single marked May J.'s first appearance in the Oricon top 10.
May J. performed as the opening act for American R&B singer Cassie alongside Rōma Tanaka at Cassie's concert at Shibuya O-EAST on November 28, 2006.[6] December 20, 2006, saw May J.'s first solo single release when "Here We Go feat. Verbal (M-Flo)" dropped and charted at #70 on the weekly charts.
Her follow-up single, "Dear…" was released on May 30, 2006, and was unlike most of her previous work. Despite the ballad being much more Japanese-friendly than her debut, the single charted at just #90. May J. was then featured on Hip-Hop artist Zeebra's new album World of Music on the track "Shinin' Like a Diamond". In October, it was announced that May J. would be releasing her 3rd single, "Do tha' Do tha'" on November 21, followed shortly by her first full-length studio album, Baby Girl on December 5.
In October 2008, she became the co-host of NHK's English-language weekly music program J-Melo, with Shanti Snyder, going out to 180 countries via NHK World. She became sole host in March 2010 and has remained ever since.
2009–present: Rise to prominence
On March 6, 2009, label Rhythm Zone opened a new official site for May J. confirming that she had left Sony to join the Avex imprint. On the May 23, 2009, her second album Family was announced, featuring the single Garden (featuring DJ Kaori, Diggy-MO', クレンチ&ブリスタ).[7] The album charted at #4 on the Oricon weekly chart.
Her third full album titled For You was released on February 17, 2010. Her first solo live tour, lasting ten weeks and including 40 shows followed, culminating at Tokyo's Shibuya AX venue on May 23, 2010.[1]
On November 24, 2010, she released a mini-album titled Believin... as a prelude to her fourth full album Colors, released on January 26, 2011.[7]
In 2012, May J. recorded the song "Back to Your Heart" with Canadian singer Daniel Powter.
May J sings the end roll version of the title song "Let It Go" in Disney's Japanese release of the Frozen animated movie which hit No. 8 on the Japan Hot 100 after the film's Japanese release in March 2014.[8]
May J has appeared on the variety show Kanjani8 no Shiwake Eight since 2012, as part of a karaoke contest segment, winning 26 straight contests before losing to Sarah Àlainn with the Idina Menzel version of "Let It Go", on the May 3, 2014, edition.[9]
Discography
Studio albums
Album information | Chart position | First week sales (Oricon) | Copies sold (Oricon) |
---|---|---|---|
JPN | |||
"Baby Girl"
|
50 | 4,110 | 12,078 |
"Family"
|
4 | 26,662 | 94,848 |
"For You"
|
9 | 10,976 | 30,334 |
"Colors"
|
23 | 4,547 | 8,243 |
"Secret Diary"
|
35 | 3,105 | 5,140 |
"Brave"
|
57 | 2,585 | 3,331 |
"Imperfection"
|
3 | 16,799 | 39,917 |
"Futuristic"
|
24 |
Singles
Title | Release date | Peak chart positions | Copies sold (Oricon) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oricon[10] | Japan Hot 100[11] | ||||||||||
I Say Yeah! | October 4, 2006 | 8 | × | - | |||||||
Here We Go (featuring Verbal) | December 20, 2006 | 70 | × | 3,865 | |||||||
Dear… | May 30, 2007 | 97 | × | 1,758 | |||||||
Do tha' Do tha | November 21, 2007 | — | × | - | |||||||
Shiny Sky | June 9, 2010 | 54 | 41 | 2,144 | |||||||
Rewind | October 10, 2012 | 30 | 47 | 2,638 | |||||||
Hontou no Koi | September 10, 2014 | 6 | 6 | 23,378 | |||||||
ReBirth(Faith) | February 25, 2015 | 11 | 26 | 15,338 | |||||||
Sparkle | August 5, 2015 | 22 | — | 6,093 | |||||||
Have Dreams! | August 3, 2016 | 28 | 64 | 3,733 | |||||||
Haha to Musume no 10,000 Nichi ~Mirai no Tobira~ | May 24, 2017 | 55 | — | 2,302 | |||||||
Kizuna Infinity / Hero | March 7, 2018 | — | — | ||||||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that region.
"×" denotes periods where charts did not exist or were not archived. |
Extended plays
Album # | Album information | Chart position | Debut Week Sales (Oricon) | Sold Copies (Oricon) |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | ||||
1st | "All My Girls "
|
85 | 2,097 | 9,432 |
2nd | "Believin'... "
|
42 | 2,819 | 4,424 |
3rd | "Love Ballad"
|
6 | 18,773 | 50,599 |
4th | "Christmas Songs"
|
22 | 4,283 | 7,551 |
Best albums
Album # | Album information | Chart position | Debut Week Sales (Oricon) | Sold Copies (Oricon) |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | ||||
1st | "With ~Best Collaboration Non-Stop DJ Mix~" (Collaboration Mix Album)
|
95 | ||
2nd | "Don't Stop! Summer Best!" (Rental Album)
|
7 | 10,684 | 62,409 |
3rd | "May J. Best - Selected Edition -" (iTunes Exclusive Digital Album)
|
— | ||
4th | "May J. BEST -7 Years Collection-"
|
13 | 7,935 | 44,349 |
5th | "Selected Ballads" (Digital Album)
|
— | ||
6th | "Ballad Best '09~'13" (Rental Album)
|
— | ||
7th | "mu-mo Gentai May J. 2013 Summer Best 3" (mumo Exclusive Digital Album)
|
— | ||
8th | "mu-mo Gentei ☆May J. 2013 SUMMER BEST 6" (mumo Exclusive Digital Album)
|
— | ||
9th | "May J. W BEST -Original & Covers-"
|
7 | 10,684 | 62,409 |
10th | "Best of Duets"
|
30 | 2,839 | 3,519 |
11th | "May J. W BEST 2 -Original & Covers-"
|
Cover albums
Album # | Album information | Chart position | Debut Week Sales (Oricon) | Sold Copies (Oricon) |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | ||||
1st | "Summer Ballad Covers"
|
4 | 46,418 | 203,186 |
2nd | "Heartful Song Covers"
|
3 | 29,375 | 245,473 |
3rd | "May J. sings Disney"
|
6 | 9,006 | 22,981 |
4th | "Sweet Song Covers"
|
6 | 8,168 | 15,037 |
5th | "Cinema Song Covers" (Standart Album, English Album and Instrumental Album)
|
29 | ||
6th | "Heisei Love Song Covers Supported by DAM" (Standart Version and Karaoke Version)
|
24 |
Live albums
Album # | Album information | Chart position | Debut Week Sales (Oricon) | Sold Copies (Oricon) |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | ||||
1st | "May J. Live Autumn Tour 2013 ~Best & Covers~" (Rental Album)
|
— | ||
2nd | "Budokan Live 2015 ~Live to the Future~" (Rental Album)
|
— | ||
3rd | "10th Anniversary Tour 2016 @ Nakano Sun Plaza 2016.7.3" (Fanclub Limited Album)
|
— | ||
4th | "10th Anniversary Grand Finale ~The Request Live~ @ Orchard Hall 2016.10.9" (Fanclub Limited Album)
|
— | ||
5th | "Tour 2017 ~ME, MYSELF & OUR MUSIC~ "Futuristic" @ Hitomi Kinen Koudou 2017.7.3" (Fanclub Limited Album)
|
— | ||
6th | "Billboard Classics May J. Premium Concert 2017 ~Me, Myself & Orchestra~" (Digital Album)
|
— |
Video albums
Album # | Album information | Chart position | Debut Week Sales (Oricon) | Sold Copies (Oricon) |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | ||||
1st | "Baby Girl Clips" (PV collection DVD)
|
297 | ||
2nd | "Budokan Live 2015 ~Live to the Future~"
|
28 | ||
3rd | "May J. BEST LIVE DVD BOOK"
|
— |
As featured artist
- May 27, 2009 - "Unchain my Heart" by WISE feat. May J. (in album Love Quest)
- December 15, 2010 - "HeartBeat" by TARO SOUL & KEN THE 390 feat. May J. (in album So Much Soul)
- May 16, 2012 - "REBIRTH-DAY SONG" by Demon Kakka feat. May J. (in album MYTHOLOGY)
- October 24, 2012 - "who.am.i.?" by Bentley Jones feat. May J. and Curtis Young (in album UPGRADE 1.0)
- March 12, 2013 - "Sweet Spot" by Flo Rida featuring May J.
- November 27, 2015 - "北極星" by Show Luo - 羅志祥 feat. May J. - 橋本芽生
- April 2017 - Jun.K (from 2PM) - 私たちの別れた話 (Duet with May J.)
References
- ^ a b c d e f Robert Michael Poole (2010-04-15). "May J - The J-pop songstress reveals her Persian heritage". Metropolis (free magazine). Retrieved 2011-05-04.
- ^ Music Fair. May 17, 2014. Fuji Television.
- ^ Generasia May J.
- ^ "Sony Music Online Japan". May J.: All my girls. Retrieved December 10, 2006.
- ^ "NeOSITE 10th". Archived from the original on October 26, 2018. Retrieved December 10, 2006.
- ^ "Kingrecords Webcommunication". Tanaka Rōma. Archived from the original on April 27, 2007. Retrieved December 10, 2006.
- ^ a b "May J - Official Site". Retrieved December 5, 2006.
- ^ "Japan Billboard Hot 100 2014/04/28". Billboard (in Japanese). April 23, 2014. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
- ^ May j. カラオケ初黒星に涙「悔しい ゼロから頑張る」 - Sponichi Annex (in Japanese). May 3, 2014. Retrieved July 6, 2014.
- ^ "オリコンランキング情報サービス「you大樹」". Oricon. Retrieved January 31, 2014. (subscription only)
- ^ "Japan Hot 100". Billboard. Retrieved January 31, 2014.
External links
- May J. Official Website - rhythm zone
- Sony Music Online Japan / May J.
- May J. Official Blog "Janglish Style" - in Japanese
- May J. News!! "Live & Information" - May J. Staff Blog
- May J. جون (Official Myspace) - MySpace
- May J. (MayJamileh) - Twitter
- May J. Lyrics Discography
- 1988 births
- Living people
- American School in Japan alumni
- Avex Group artists
- Japanese women pop singers
- Japanese people of Iranian descent
- Japanese people of Russian descent
- Japanese rhythm and blues singers
- Ki/oon Music artists
- Musicians from Kanagawa Prefecture
- People from Yokohama
- English-language singers from Japan
- 21st-century Japanese singers
- 21st-century Japanese women singers