[I want to hear it again!] Songs from Suntory commercials. Popular commercial jingles
Suntory sells a wide variety of beverages, including tea, alcoholic drinks, coffee, and water.
When you watch TV, you often see a lot of commercials for Suntory products.
The songs featured in these commercials frequently become a hot topic, with a wide range of tracks used—from popular J-pop to classic Western hits.
In this article, we’ll introduce all the songs that have been used in Suntory commercials.
See if you can find any track that caught your ear in a commercial!
- [I want to listen again!] Popular beer commercial songs. All-time CM songs [2026]
- Catchy Showa-era commercial jingles. Introducing famous songs recently featured in commercials, too!
- A roundup of Suntory commercials: ads for popular beverages like BOSS and Kinmugi.
- Catchy commercial jingles. A roundup of those songs grabbing attention in ads!
- [Western Music] Commercial Songs I Often Hear Recently [2026]
- [Nostalgic Commercials] A compilation of commercials that aired in the Showa era
- [From timeless classics to the latest hits] A roundup of catchy commercial songs
- 80s Western pop hits featured in commercials. A roundup of nostalgic CM songs.
- 80s commercial songs. A roundup of Japanese songs from the 80s that have been used in commercials.
- [Heartwarming] Moving CM songs. Popular commercial songs
- Heartwarming nostalgic commercial jingles: a special collection of timeless hits that take you back.
- Jazz commercial songs. Popular commercial songs.
- Pepsi commercials roundup. Introducing Suntory’s Pepsi series commercials!
[Want to hear it again!] Songs from Suntory commercials. Popular commercial songs (211–220)
LA BAMBANakatani Yasushi

This is the song playing in the Boss Cafe Base commercial featuring comedy duo Haraichi’s Yūki Iwai and actress Sairi Itō as a married couple.
“La Bamba” is originally a Mexican folk song, and the version covered by the American band Los Lobos in 1987 is well-known.
The version used in this commercial is arranged by Yasushi Nakatani, who has worked on many commercial songs.
Its breezy guitar melody and the bold parody lyrics, “Wattara eyan” (“Just mix it and you’re good”), perfectly match the commercial’s easygoing vibe.
Oriental WindHisaishi Joe

When it comes to the commercial song for Suntory’s green tea “Iyemon,” it has to be this track! Even if you don’t know the title, I think many people recognize the melody from hearing it so often.
The piece is “Oriental Wind” by Joe Hisaishi, known for his work on Studio Ghibli film soundtracks.
As the title suggests, it has an oriental atmosphere that fits perfectly with a green tea commercial.
Ah, summer vacation.Maeda Nobuteru

Who’s the first artist or band that comes to mind when you think of summer J-pop? If you were in your late 30s to 40s or older as of 2021, many of you probably think of Southern All Stars and TUBE.
TUBE in particular released many summer vacation songs, and their most famous classic, “Ah Natsuyasumi” (Ah, Summer Vacation), was reborn as a parody version in 2021! TUBE’s vocalist, Nobuteru Maeda, appears in the commercial himself, passionately singing the parody tailored to the theme of Suntory’s “GREEN DA•KA•RA Yasashii Mugicha” commercial.
The original song was released as a single in 1990 and has been used as a commercial song across different eras.
If the ad piqued your interest and you’re young, be sure to check out the original track too!
Until we meet againOzaki Kiyohiko


This commercial features Tsuyoshi Kusanagi giving Goro Inagaki and Shingo Katori a lesson on how to dispose of plastic bottles when they’re out and about.
It explains that disposing of them properly allows the bottles to be recycled and turned back into new PET bottles.
The background music is a cover of Kiyohiko Ozaki’s Showa-era classic “Mata Au Hi Made” (“Until the Day We Meet Again”).
The arrangement gives it a much softer, more pop-like feel than the original, creating a light and breezy impression.
lonelinessorisaka yuta

Yuta Orisaka’s “Sabishisa” is a track included on his 2018 album Heisei, but three years after its release, in 2021, it was featured in a Suntory Tennensui commercial.
The lively 3/4-time accompaniment and Orisaka’s striking vocals—deftly switching between a rich chest voice and a clear, airy falsetto—leave a strong impression, and as you listen, you feel yourself drawn deeper into the world of his music.
This song might be a good gateway to exploring more of his work.


