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Kenshi Yonezu Love Songs and Popular Tracks Ranking [2026]

Kenshi Yonezu Love Songs and Popular Tracks Ranking [2026]
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Kenshi Yonezu now enjoys overwhelming popularity and is dominating the domestic music scene.

Beyond his own songs, he’s steadily expanding his activities by writing and providing tracks for other artists as well.

Among his works, there are quite a few love songs, and their lyrics are all deeply flavorful—many of them make you want to listen over and over while pondering their meaning.

In this article, we’ve ranked his love songs, so be sure to check which tracks are the most popular.

Kenshi Yonezu Love Songs and Popular Tracks Ranking [2026] (1–10)

Eine KleineYonezu Kenshi1rank/position

The more dearly you care for someone, the more frightening the parting that will one day come.

Capturing such a delicate emotional landscape, this piece grips the listener’s heart.

It’s a track from the album “YANKEE,” released in April 2014, and it also drew attention as the song used in Tokyo Metro’s “Color your days.” ad campaign.

Although it was never released as a single, it enjoys overwhelming popularity, with over 300 million views on video platforms.

Its bittersweet yet warm melody is perfect for a heartfelt karaoke moment, singing while thinking of someone you hold dear.

orionYonezu Kenshi2rank/position

Kenshi Yonezu – Orion, Kenshi Yonezu
orionYonezu Kenshi

Kenshi Yonezu, who has crafted numerous heartrending love ballads, also created this song, “orion,” one of the most popular numbers among his love songs.

It’s also known as the ending theme for the anime March Comes in Like a Lion.

A love song themed around the winter constellation Orion, it conveys the chill of winter air, deepening the sense of melancholy.

Even if the love is unrequited, you find yourself wishing toward the sky—your chest tightens with the urge to entrust your hopes to God or the stars.

MetronomeYonezu Kenshi3rank/position

A song that overlays the gradual misalignment of two people’s relationship with an instrument keeping a steady rhythm, conveying a poignant sense of missed connections that tugs at the heart.

Included on the 2015 album “Bremen,” this track powerfully conveys the helplessness of starting in the same tempo only to drift apart over time, as well as the lingering attachment that makes you keep searching for the other person even after you’ve parted.

The animated music video—hand-drawn by Kenshi Yonezu himself with about 200 illustrations—visually deepens the song’s world and leaves a strong impression.

For anyone with an unforgettable love or who has experienced growing apart from someone dear, this is a sorrowful yet beautiful ballad that resonates deeply.

fireworks (launched into the sky)DAOKO × Yonezu Kenshi4rank/position

This song poignantly sings of a fleeting moment of youth through the spectacle of grand fireworks blooming in the summer night sky.

The contrasting voices of DAOKO and Kenshi Yonezu blend over a dreamy melody that resonates deeply.

Released in August 2017, it was featured as the theme song for the film “Fireworks, Should We See It from the Side or the Bottom?” released the same year.

Cherishing memories that have passed while giving you the courage to move forward, this is a track that you’ll want to listen to at summer’s end—a heartrending, tear-jerking ballad.

FlamingoYonezu Kenshi5rank/position

This song expresses the emptiness hidden behind beauty through vivid tones and wistful lyrics.

Using the fragile yet beautiful flamingo as a motif, it skillfully portrays the complexities of human emotion.

The exhilaration of falling in love is interwoven with the inner turmoil and jealousy that accompany it, resonating deeply with listeners.

Released in October 2018, the track was also featured in a Sony wireless earphones commercial.

With Kenshi Yonezu’s characteristically poetic expression and a distinctive musicality that incorporates elements of African beats and jazz, this piece is recommended for those struggling with love or wishing to confront their own emotions.

spring thunderYonezu Kenshi6rank/position

Like thunder that only rumbles in spring, this work by Kenshi Yonezu leaves a strong impression with the intense emotions born from a fleeting encounter.

The purity and poignancy of first love are depicted in poetic language, carefully narrating the shift in feelings from meeting to the end of the romance.

With its dreamlike sound and striking lyrics, it’s a song that lingers deeply in the listener’s heart.

Included on the album BOOTLEG, released in November 2017, the album won the Grand Prize at the 10th CD Shop Awards in 2018.

The music video, celebrated for its fantastical visual beauty, also drew attention and surpassed 100 million views on YouTube in July 2020.

It’s a perfect track to listen to in the season when spring arrives, and its melody makes it easy to sing at karaoke.

Why not try singing it at spring farewell parties or occasions that bring new encounters?

LemonYonezu Kenshi7rank/position

Kenshi Yonezu’s “Lemon” became a historic long-running hit.

Yonezu himself reportedly said of the song, “I feel like all I’m saying is, ‘I’m sad that you died.’” Still, it can be taken as a farewell in many situations—an eternal parting with someone who has departed for the sky, or a separation from someone whose feelings drifted away and left you.

We tend to try to forget painful memories, but doesn’t listening to this song make you feel that it’s okay not to force yourself to forget—that it’s fine to keep them tucked away in a corner of your memory as you go on living?

Pale BlueYonezu Kenshi8rank/position

Kenshi Yonezu – Pale Blue / Kenshi Yonezu
Pale BlueYonezu Kenshi

A song that delicately captures the emotions of accepting a farewell to someone long loved.

Using poetic metaphors such as the edelweiss flower and darkening earrings, it symbolically portrays the changes in a relationship and the sadness woven into everyday life.

Released in June 2021, the track was also used as the theme song for TBS’s Friday drama “Rikokatsu,” resonating with many listeners.

The lyrics depict a resolve to move forward even while holding the pain of heartbreak, making it a perfect fit for the autumn season, when endings in love and new beginnings are felt.

Kenshi Yonezu’s delicate lyrics and emotionally rich melody are sure to leave a deep impression on listeners.

junkYonezu Kenshi9rank/position

A bittersweet farewell song that portrays the resolve to keep living while carrying sorrow for what’s broken and can’t be reclaimed.

Written as the theme song for the film “Last Mile” and released in August 2024, this piece gives you the courage to face forward while accepting your imperfections.

It’s a song that stands with those who are hurting from heartbreak or who have lost something precious.

Yonezu’s distinctive melodies and profound lyrics deliver a moving resonance that stays with you.

AzaleaYonezu Kenshi10rank/position

A gem-like ballad by Kenshi Yonezu, written as the theme song for the Netflix drama “The Sequel to Goodbye.” Delicately portraying the sorrow of losing someone dear and the unwavering love that remains, the piece blends crystalline piano tones with electronic sounds into a beautiful track.

Released digitally in November 2024, it expresses the drama’s central theme of “the inheritance of memory”—starring Kasumi Arimura and Kentaro Sakaguchi—through striking metaphors such as a flower grown from a cutting and photographs one cannot throw away.

It is a song that gently stays close to the hearts of those who have lost a loved one or carry deep feelings for someone important.