RAG MusicBallad
Lovely ballad

A classic medium-tempo ballad in Western music

Medium ballads—with passionate vocals and a comfortable tempo—are a particularly popular category among Japanese listeners.

There are many classic medium ballads in Western music as well.

This time, we’ve selected some especially recommended masterpieces of medium ballads from Western music.

Great medium-tempo ballad masterpieces in Western music (41–50)

Struck A NerveBad Religion

Bad Religion – Struck A Nerve
Struck A NerveBad Religion

Included on the 1993 album “Recipe for Hate.” A six-piece punk band from Los Angeles formed in 1979.

It’s a rare ballad for a hardcore band, a song that passionately sings about being moved.

I always feel like I’m going to cry when I listen to it.

No One KnowsBadfinger

Badfinger is a British rock band.

“No One Knows” was included on their 1974 album Wish You Were Here.

As you’d expect from a band often seen as the Beatles’ protégés, the song is full of that flavor.

The sudden Japanese MC that appears in the track is surprising, but it’s actually the voice of Mika Kato, who was the vocalist of the Japanese band Sadistic Mika Band.

My WorldBee Gees

Bee gees: My world With lyrics
My WorldBee Gees

The Bee Gees are a brother band that has been active since the 1960s.

In their early years they pursued a soft rock sound, then scored massive hits with disco in the mid-1970s, and afterward each mainly focused on solo work.

This album is from 1967.

Although it had a fairly understated image, it’s filled with a gentleness and softness that only the Bee Gees of that time could create.

This Is A LowBlur

Blur – This Is A Low (HD)
This Is A LowBlur

Alongside Oasis, Blur was a band that defined the British music scene of the 1990s.

This piece was included on their 1994 album Parklife.

The title “Low” refers to a low-pressure system.

The song features an evocative sound that lingers, themed around the low-pressure systems that were causing disasters across the UK at the time.

SuperstarCarpenters

Included on the 1971 album “Carpenters.” A cover of the single released by Delaney & Bonnie in 1969.

A brother-sister pop duo from Los Angeles who debuted in 1969.

Richard, the brother, saw Bette Midler singing this song on TV and thought it would be a good fit for his sister to sing, which led them to cover it.