A song about falling for a celebrity. A love song you want to listen to when you’re truly smitten.
I’ve fallen truly in love with a celebrity.
At first I just thought they were cool or cute, but before I knew it, I was serious.
In this article, I’ll introduce love songs I want all of you in a “serious crush” to hear.
I’ve gathered a variety of romance tracks—from songs about being in love with a celebrity just like you, to songs that sing of the aching feeling of a love that can’t come true.
Find the one song that perfectly matches how you feel.
People might say, “Being in love with a celebrity… really?” but love is free, and having someone you like brings a lot of happiness, doesn’t it?
Let’s fully enjoy this moment of being in love!
- [Ria-ko / Ria-koi / Gachi-koi] A love song about being truly in love with your idol
- [Songs for Love at First Sight] Tracks to Play When You Fall in Love in an Instant
- Can't Stop the Love! A Collection of J-Pop Songs to Send Your Feelings to Your Idol
- Bittersweet love songs to listen to when the person you like already has a girlfriend or boyfriend
- A love for someone older: romantic songs about falling for a senior or your boss.
- A tear-jerking love song. A love song that stays close to a hurting heart.
- [Songs for Thinking of Someone You Love] Love Songs That Make Your Chest Tighten—From Unrequited to Mutual Love
- Songs you want to listen to when you’re in the mood for love. Romantic tracks that make you want to fall in love.
- Songs that make you want to fall in love. Heart-throbbing love songs.
- Love songs sung by idols: from heart-wrenching tracks to ones that make your heart skip a beat!
- Unrequited love songs that strike a man's heart. Love songs from a male perspective that really hit home.
- Love songs. Timeless and popular tracks dedicated to those in love.
- [Unrequited Love] Heart-wrenching Love Songs | A Roundup of Tear-Inducing Crush and Breakup Tracks
A song about falling for a celebrity. Love songs you want to listen to when you’re truly in love (71–80)
tear-coloredNishino Kana

Kana Nishino could be called the queen of Heisei-era love songs without exaggeration.
This track of hers—indispensable when talking about love songs—is a breakup song.
The things she came to like because of the guy she loved, the ways she changed, and what he did for her.
She cherishes it all, yet she can no longer see him—the sadness, the loneliness…
Of course, bubbly, happy love songs are her signature as well, but even when she sings about heartbreak, the way she understands a woman’s feelings to the core is exactly why she’s the queen of love songs.
I want to be your lover.Abe Mao

Abe Mao’s “I Want to Be Your Girlfriend” conveys that feeling powerfully from the title alone.
This song expresses emotions in a very straightforward way.
Falling in love brings lots of fun, but it also makes you worry about little things, doesn’t it? It’s packed with all those relatable feelings of being in love—the urge to ask them this and that, the fantasies of what you’d do if you became a couple—and it’s a song that people with a one-sided crush can really relate to.
l love youChris Hart

A deeply moving ballad that sings of profound feelings for a loved one.
The lyrics, blending heartache and warmth, leave a lasting impression.
Chris Hart’s emotionally rich vocals beautifully convey the pain of a lost love and the affection for cherished memories.
Released in February 2014, the song reached No.
30 on the Oricon chart.
It went on to gain popularity in karaoke, rising to No.
13 in the rankings in 2018.
A heartwarming piece that offers comfort to those troubled by love or holding dear their precious memories.
When I Fall in LoveCrystal Kay

Crystal Kay, known for her love songs, sings about the feelings of a woman in love in “Koi ni Ochitara.” While love songs often have a sorrowful image, this track expresses the warmth of cherishing someone special, leaving you with a comforting feeling.
Try listening to it while thinking of someone important to you.
Why am I still this into you…?Kodera Kenta

This song is sung in the Okayama dialect, but I think you’ll understand it.
The song is about how, even though we were living together, little by little we started to drift apart, and you left me and walked out of here.
Even though I truly love you and wanted us to face forward and walk together, I only realized it after we separated—how foolish I am.


