Japanese breakup songs sung by female artists
When you’re dealing with the pain of a broken heart, are you looking for songs that gently stay by your side? Heartbreak songs by female artists are filled with lyrics that speak for your feelings and emotions you can relate to.
Belt them out at karaoke and cry your heart out, or listen alone and quietly heal.
In this article, we’ll share heartbreak songs that can be your emotional support.
The voices that resonate with your wounded heart and the timeless tracks that give you the courage to look forward will surely wrap you in gentle comfort.
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Breakup songs in Japanese (J-Pop) sung by female artists (61–70)
I just had a love sadder than anyone else’s.Flower

This song, included on Flower’s best-of album, is a painful love song, but it’s marked by the vocalist’s beautifully clear, transparent voice.
The highly polished music video is motivating just to watch! It’s a recommended track for when you’re feeling down about love.
Always, the two of usieiri reo

Leo Ieiri’s 2017 release “Zutto, Futari de.” The lyrics about only being able to see the beloved person right in front of you are wonderful, aren’t they? You can sense a personality brimming with maternal warmth, one that accepts even the painful past of the person they love.
Goodbye, my beloved.Hana*Hana

A song written by Izumi Kojima in memory of her beloved grandfather.
It was also the theme song for the 2000 TV drama “Oyaji.” When someone you love or someone close to you passes away, you really can’t find the words, can you? It’s precisely because the lyrics are so simple and awkward that they resonate so deeply.
Song of SpringFujihara Sakura

Spring Song by Sakura Fujiwara, a singer-songwriter born in ’95.
You can really feel her talent in the lyrics, which skillfully use metaphors—as if to say that stating things outright is nonsense.
Precisely because the song can be interpreted in many ways, it’s one I’d like people nursing a broken heart to hear.
Let’s count your kisses ~You were mine~Koyanagi Yuki

This is a classic hit by Yuki Koyanagi that’s loved not only in Japan but across Asian countries as a heartbreak song.
Although it was released in 1999, many people in younger generations probably know it as well.
The lyrics, which express emotions straightforwardly, resonate with listeners.


