RAG MusicCM
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[Canned Coffee / Bottled Coffee] CM Songs for Georgia and BOSS

Canned coffee brightens our breaks, whether between studying or working.

Since canned coffee is so familiar in our daily lives, you probably often see canned coffee commercials on TV.

Have you ever wondered about the music used in those canned coffee commercials while watching them?

A wide variety of songs have been used over the years, including classic rock and jazz from overseas and popular tracks by Japanese artists.

In this article, we’ll introduce canned coffee commercial songs all at once, regardless of brand!

We hope you’ll find the track you heard in a commercial and were curious about—or maybe even a new favorite.

[Canned Coffee and Bottled Coffee] CM Songs for Georgia and BOSS (91–100)

PRIDE OF BOSS “Ama (Female Diver)” Version

Begin the BeguineCole Porter

Begin The Beguine [Song by Cole Porter] 1944
Begin the BeguineCole Porter

If you’re a jazz fan, you might already know it.

It’s a song by the American composer Cole Porter, who also wrote Night and Day.

The record released in 1938 became a runaway hit and has been loved ever since as a jazz standard.

The subject is the then-popular dance, the beguine.

It has a certain sultry charm, doesn’t it? It was used in the popular commercial series starring the alien Jones, BOSS “Ama” edition.

WONDA X-BITTER “Unexpected Performance” Version

Variations on ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star’ in C major, K. 265YOSHIKI

YOSHIKI plays a blazing fast, ultra-arranged version of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”!? Wonda × BITTER Black commercial ‘Unexpected Performance’ edition & making-of
Variations on 'Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star' in C major, K. 265YOSHIKI

YOSHIKI, known as the leader and drummer of X JAPAN, is also famous for having played classical piano since childhood.

Here he performs Mozart’s Variations on “Ah! vous dirai-je, maman” on his signature transparent grand piano.

The charm lies in how that familiar theme becomes increasingly intricate with each variation.

Although the lyrics to “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” were written after Mozart’s time, the melody remains one of the most widely known pieces in classical music.