Masayuki Suzuki Popular Songs Ranking [2026]
Here’s a ranking of popular songs by Masayuki Suzuki, a pioneer of Japanese R&B and a top runner in the pop scene.
You can enjoy a variety of classics, from laid-back doo-wop numbers and refreshing pop songs featured in commercials to duet tracks that became huge karaoke hits.
- Masayuki Suzuki’s greatest and most popular songs
- [For Karaoke!] Recommended Easy-to-Sing Songs by Masayuki Suzuki
- [Adultery Song] A forbidden song about an affair that sings of an impossible love
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- [50s] Popular Song Ranking by Generation [2026]
- Masaharu Fukuyama Love Songs and Popular Tracks Ranking [2026]
- Masaharu Fukuyama’s Most Moving Songs and Popular Tracks Ranking [2026]
- Masaharu Fukuyama’s Most Popular Songs Ranking [2026]
- Happy Song Rankings [2026]
- Eiichi Ohtaki Popular Song Rankings [2026]
- Rats & Star Popular Song Rankings [2026]
- Ranking of Ami Sakaguchi’s Popular Songs [2026]
- Ami Suzuki’s Most Popular Songs Ranking [2026]
Masayuki Suzuki Popular Songs Ranking [2026] (61–70)
Rain Sounds of the Night SkySuzuki Masayuki66rank/position

It’s a song about lovers on a serene night.
From beginning to end, it’s calm and unhurried—a track that soothes you as you listen.
Although the middle section of the lyrics is entirely in English, Masayuki Suzuki’s pronunciation is excellent, so it doesn’t feel out of place.
A dream within a dreamSuzuki Masayuki67rank/position

This might be my favorite number among Masayuki Suzuki’s songs.
From the intro alone, you can tell it’s produced by Kazumasa Oda—the Oda flavor is strong throughout.
That said, if Oda himself were singing it, I think it would be something entirely different.
It’s a song about a past love that can never be reclaimed, but rather than a lonely ballad, Suzuki’s powerful vocals even create a kind of positivity.
That, in turn, makes the poignancy all the more heart-wrenching.
If I can see you in my dreamsSuzuki Masayuki (Rattsu & Sutā)68rank/position
This is a legendary masterpiece that has been used in many ways up to the present, including as the theme song for a Fuji TV–hosted event and as the departure melody on trains.
Its sweet, beautiful melody resonates deeply when you listen to it.
It’s popular not only among people in their forties and older, but also among younger listeners these days.
Be sure to pay attention to the harmony parts as well.
Stardust Dance HallSuzuki Masayuki & Kuwano Nobuyoshi69rank/position
Masayuki Suzuki composed this himself.
Rather than a noisy dance hall, it really conveys the feeling of slowly dancing with your lover in a relaxed dance hall.
In the English lyrics, there’s a phrase “empty dance hall,” which I suppose is expressing a love that feels like it’s floating softly in the sky.




