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[For Seniors] Popular Summer Songs: Selections That Liven Up Karaoke

[For Seniors] Popular Summer Songs: Selections That Liven Up Karaoke
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[For Seniors] Popular Summer Songs: Selections That Liven Up Karaoke

In many senior care facilities, there are opportunities to sing during recreation time or exercise sessions.

Staff members may sometimes struggle to choose songs that suit older adults.

In such cases, songs with seasonal themes are highly recommended.

Singing songs that match the season can help older adults feel the passage of the four seasons.

If the songs are ones they sang in childhood, some may look back on the past with fond memories.

This time, we’ve gathered many songs with a summer theme.

Please enjoy a fun time with summer songs.

[For Seniors] Popular Summer Songs: Karaoke Crowd-Pleasers (1–10)

fireflysakushi: inoue takeru sakkyoku: shimousa kanichi

This song lets you feel the beautiful transitions of nature, conjuring a quiet scene from summer dusk into night.

The lyrics were written by Takeru Inoue, who also devoted himself to language education, and the music was composed by Kan’ichi Shimofusa, a music educator who left behind many masterpieces.

It is a song included in a textbook published in 1932 and has been loved across generations.

The waterside scenery and the glimmer of lights in the darkness are expressed in exquisitely delicate words, and you can hum along to the gentle, comforting melody with a calm heart.

Because it is written within a range that can be sung without strain, it is perfect for daily singing exercises and choral recreation.

How about playing it as background music during the cool of the evening and sharing seasonal memories together with older adults?

Light Blue RainYagami Junko

Light Blue Rain Junko Yagami with lyrics
Light Blue RainYagami Junko

A masterpiece that paints the pain of heartbreak in vivid colors, its sophisticated, urban sound lingers in the heart.

Released in September 1978 as singer-songwriter Junko Yagami’s fifth single, the song remains enduringly popular.

In October 1978, after appearing in a spotlight segment on a music program, it became widely known and a major hit.

Its soaring high-tone vocals and translucent melody are a perfect match for June’s gentle, humid air.

Sprinkled with rain motifs, this piece is ideal as background music for leisurely time spent indoors.

It’s also lovely to sing it freely at a karaoke gathering in a key that suits your voice.

How about it for a calm, rainy-day moment?

Sugarcane fieldSakushi sakkyoku: Terashima Naohiko

Sugarcane Field (♪ zawawa zawawa~) by Himawari ×9 [Chorus] Full Version with Lyrics | 8/15 End of War Memorial Day
Sugarcane fieldSakushi sakkyoku: Terashima Naohiko

This is an anti-war song imbued with a deep wish for peace, overlaying memories of the Battle of Okinawa with the sound of sugarcane swaying in the wind.

It was conceived when Naohiko Terashima visited Okinawa in 1964 and was told about the remains of the war dead at Mabuni Hill.

Premiered in 1967, it became widely beloved after Naomi Chiaki sang it on NHK’s music program “Minna no Uta” in 1975.

Told from the perspective of a girl who lost her father in the war, the song features the symbolic sound “zawawa” repeated 66 times, resonating deeply with listeners.

It’s a recommended piece for those who have experienced war or for moments when you want to reflect on peace.

Plover on the BeachSakushi: Kashima Naruaki / Sakkyoku: Hirota Ryūtarō

The work that richly portrays a plover crying as it searches for its parents on a blue moonlit beach was first introduced to the world by Meishū Kashima and Ryūtarō Hirota in the New Year’s issue of the magazine Shōjo-gō in 1919.

It poetically depicts a bird born from the realm of waves, with wet wings of silver, crossing the sea in search of its parents and vanishing into the land of moonlight.

It is said that behind this piece lies Meishū Kashima’s feelings for the parents from whom he was separated early in life, giving the song a profound content that symbolizes the bond between parent and child and the sorrow of parting.

Although classified as a children’s song, it is also appreciated as a lyric song, and its calm, gentle melody beautifully colors the seaside scenery.

It’s perfect for those who wish to sing while reminiscing about the past, or for moments when you want to feel the changing of the seasons.

Waltz of StarlightSen Masao

Masao Sen’s signature song, which portrays the bittersweet pain of parting, is a masterpiece that delicately captures the feelings of a man and woman who love each other yet cannot be together.

The protagonist’s anguish as he steps aside for the other’s happiness, and the decision born of deep love, resonate deeply.

Although this piece was originally the B-side of a single released in March 1966, through Sen’s steady promotional efforts it reached No.

1 on the Oricon year-end chart in 1968 and became a massive hit with total sales of 2.5 million copies.

Its wistful waltz melody and soul-stirring vocals are sure to profoundly move listeners with rich life experience.

It’s a song you’ll want to sing together, wrapped in fond memories.

Ginza Kan-kan GirlTakamine Hideko

Hideko Takamine Ginza Kankan Musume (with lyrics)
Ginza Kan-kan GirlTakamine Hideko

Brimming with the hope and vitality of Japan’s postwar reconstruction period, it became beloved as the theme song for the film of the same name released in 1949.

The song accompanies a story in which a young woman aspiring to be a painter—played by Hideko Takamine—sings her way through bars in Ginza to earn her tuition.

Ryoichi Hattori’s light, swinging jazz melds with Takao Saeki’s cheerful lyrics, resulting in a major hit that sold 500,000 copies at the time.

It strikingly captures the strength of women who lived positively even amid the postwar turmoil, along with the lively melody that resonated through the streets of Ginza.

When sung as a recreation by older adults, it is likely to evoke memories of the postwar recovery and their youthful days, encouraging everyone to hum along together.

Beach of MemoriesZa Wairudowanzu

The Wild Ones - Shore of Memories (with lyrics)
Beach of MemoriesZa Wairudowanzu

This iconic song, emblematic of the Group Sounds boom, is a refreshing piece of surf music that sings of youth by the seaside.

Released in November 1966 as their debut single, it became a massive hit, selling over a million copies.

The beautiful resonance of the 12-string electric guitar and the lyrics depicting memories on the beach are striking, vividly evoking summer scenes.

The song was also used as a movie theme and has continued to be covered by many artists.

It’s a perfect track for reminiscing about nostalgic youthful days or for summer recreation.

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