Songs with titles that start with “Pi.” Useful for word-chain games or karaoke hints!
Have you ever played “song-title shiritori,” where you’re only allowed to use song titles?
When music lovers play it together, it’s fun because all kinds of songs come up—and on the flip side, it can get lively when you realize you can’t think of as many titles as you expected.
Adding a shiritori twist to karaoke—“shiritori karaoke”—is also a blast.
You connect the songs like in shiritori, and it gets exciting when you end up singing tracks you don’t usually pick.
So in this article, to give you a helpful nudge for those fun moments, I’ll introduce songs whose titles start with “pi.”
I hope you find it useful and have a great time!
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- Songs with titles that start with “ba.” Useful hints for karaoke or shiritori!
- Songs that start with “Pa.” Great for game hints or making playlists!
- A collection of Vocaloid songs with titles starting with “Pe”
- A collection of songs with titles that start with “Mi.” Useful for shiritori and karaoke.
- Songs with titles that start with “po”
- Summary of Vocaloid songs with titles starting with 'Pa'
- A roundup of Vocaloid songs with titles that start with “Pu”
- Songs with titles starting with “Ki” [Great for karaoke & shiritori!]
Songs with titles that start with “Pi.” Perfect for shiritori or karaoke hints! (251–260)
PianistKasamura Tōta

When you’re completely exhausted and your heart aches unbearably, this song will be there to help you.
“Pianista” by Vocaloid producer Tota Kasamura was released in October 2023.
Composed only of vocals and piano, each note is gentle and sinks into your heart.
It fully showcases Kasamura’s musical sensibilities.
The lyrics—“There are things you can only understand once you’ve become an adult, but by then it’s sometimes too late”—carry a palpable sense of frustration, yet that’s precisely what conveys its tenderness.
P-P-P-PEROGen’in wa jibun ni aru.

We invite you to a pure white dreamy world.
Genjibu’s track “P-P-P-PERO” was released in July 2024 as the theme song for the anime “EguMi Legacy.” Dubbed a “Genjibu-style pop tune,” this piece features a simple, catchy melody that’s irresistibly addictive.
Its fanciful sound arrangement is another highlight.
A new musical experience might be waiting for you.
Piano LessonFurukawa P

It’s electronica with pleasing piano and bass.
The overall structure is simple, yet it’s easy on the ears and you can’t help but put it on loop.
It’s romantic and beautiful, and very soothing.
It’s also a track you’ll want to listen to just before dawn.
Flowing, elegant dance would suit it well.
PEACHOtsuka Ai

One song that brings back the brilliant memories of my youth is Ai Otsuka’s “PEACH.” When it was released in 2007, it became a huge hit, especially among younger generations, and I imagine many people find that hearing this track revives memories of their school days.
Its bright, refreshing melody, set against a summery backdrop, still feels invigorating today and is so familiar you can’t help but hum along.
The lyrics, depicting sweet, fluttering feelings of love, not only remind us of that time but also rekindle a sense of excitement.
PINK BLOODUtada Hikaru

This is a message song that teaches the importance of having a strong sense of self.
Created by the nationally beloved hit-making singer Hikaru Utada, it was released as a digital single in 2021 and chosen as the opening theme for the anime To Your Eternity.
Its deep sound arrangement, with hints of electronica, stokes anticipation for the story.
If you listen to it when you’re struggling with how to live or what to do with your life, it might just offer you a guiding light.
Peach X’masOkamura Yasuyuki

This is a song included on singer-songwriter Yasuyuki Okamura’s album “Kinjirareta Ikigai,” released in December 1995.
It was also released as a single in the same month.
There is a remix version by Takkyu Ishino as well.
The song took a very long time from composition to completion: it was largely shaped by around 1990, then matured for about five years before its release.
It was previewed on NHK’s music program “X’mas Special Pops & Rock 1990,” which aired at the end of 1990, and during his 1991 live tour, and it was already popular among fans at the time.
It was also his first maxi single.
Piyo’s GratitudeIwao Junko

This is a song that was broadcast on NHK’s “Minna no Uta” in 2015.
From the title, I initially thought it was a parody of “The Grateful Crane,” but it actually has quite a deep meaning.
Interpretations probably vary by generation, but amid lyrics that pass back and forth between fairytale and reality, why does it speak of fifty years devoted to family? Piyo says that everything is a lie, but that feels like words that just slipped out.
I get the sense that from now on, they want to spend their time looking at the beautiful moon with their beloved grandpa.


