CHATMONCHY Popular Song Rankings [2026]
CHATMONCHY, the legendary girls’ band of the Heisei era, has earned overwhelming support from teens.
This time, we’re shining a spotlight on them.
We’ve listed their most frequently sung karaoke hits in a ranking, ordered by number of plays.
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CHATMONCHY Popular Song Ranking [2026] (61–70)
Tokyo Honey OrchestraChatto Monchī61rank/position

This song is included on the girls’ rock band Chatmonchy’s major-label debut album, “Miminari,” released in 2006.
The lyrics portray Tokyo as seen by each member after moving to the city.
Describing the city as a “beehive” and the busy passersby as “worker bees” gives it that uniquely approachable Chatmonchy feel.
The track itself is brisk and evokes a sense of new beginnings, highlighted by vocalist Eriko Hashimoto’s refreshing voice.
It’s a perfect song for anyone moving to Tokyo this spring for school or work.
cherry blossom frontChatto Monchī62rank/position

Chatmonchy, the band that sadly disbanded in 2018.
This song, Sakura Zensen, is included on Chatmonchy’s 2011 album YOU MORE.
Everyone has those feelings that swirl around inside, not even worth bringing up to others, right? This song turns those kinds of emotions—ones that could be taken that way—into lyrics and music.
It captures a contrast between the glamour and preciousness of cherry blossoms and the opposing feelings within, along with a wish to blur those feelings away during cherry-blossom viewing.
It’s a track that conveys all of that.
An Unfading StarChatto Monchī63rank/position

This song became the theme for the film Azumi Haruko Is Missing, and the two members of Chatmonchy reportedly wrote it after reading the script.
It features a melody characteristic of Chatmonchy and is easy to listen to.
The lyrics are profound as well: even though the lines “I want time to love you to death by living one second longer than you” and “I want to become a memory that loves you to death by you living one second longer than me” express opposite ideas, the song still conveys a deep sense of love.
steamChatto Monchī64rank/position

Yuge (Steam) is included as the B-side track on Chatmonchy’s debut single Koi no Kemuri (Smoke of Love).
It’s a staple at their live shows and a perennial fan favorite.
If you listen while picturing a chilly classroom with stuffy, trapped air, vivid scenes come to mind.
After the high-speed chorus rushes by, it’s only in the second verse that the word “yuge” — the song’s title — appears in the lyrics for the first time, and at that moment you can feel the atmosphere shift, as if reflecting a change in the protagonist’s heart.
Try listening while tuning into the delicate feelings that peek through the exquisitely chosen words.
one-way ticketChatto Monchī65rank/position

A breakup song by the all-female rock band Chatmonchy.
The lyrics, filled with regret and self-encouragement, really hit hard.


