Kōji Wada

Kōji Wada
Native name 和田 光司
Born (1974-01-29)January 29, 1974
Fukuchiyama, Kyoto, Japan
Died April 3, 2016(2016-04-03) (aged 42)
Genres Rock
Occupation(s) Singer
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1999–2016
Labels Lantis
Website www.wadakoji.com

Kōji Wada (和田 光司 Wada Kōji, January 29, 1974 – April 3, 2016[1]) was a Japanese rock singer. He made his recording debut in 1999 with his first single, "Butter-Fly", the theme song of the anime Digimon Adventure. He was signed with the Lantis recording label. His nickname is "Immortal Butterfly Anisong Singer" (不死蝶のアニソンシンガー).[2]

Life and career

Wada was born in Fukuchiyama, Kyoto, Japan. In 2003, Wada released his first original album, All of My Mind, which included many of his previous works. He also collaborated in Michihiko Ōta's self-cover album Mirai e no Message: Ōta Michihiko Self-Cover, featuring in two tracks – a cover version of "Hontō no Tsuyosa" (本当の強さ) (Ken & Wormmon's Theme) and in "3 Primary Colors" (the Tamers theme), along with AiM. Later, he released an album called The Best Selection: Welcome Back!. It contains several of his earlier works as well as two new songs, titled "Pierce" and "Kimi no Keshiki." On August 1, 2008, he debuted a mini-album titled Ever, which contained five brand new songs. An album titled Kazakami no Oka Kara (風上の丘から), was sold at his live concerts in Japan throughout the end of 2009 in commemoration of his 10th anniversary in music, and it was released worldwide on January 11, 2010.

Wada had contributed songs to six of the seven Digimon anime series (with one of his songs reused for the seventh, to which he contributed no new songs), including opening themes for the first five of them. He also performed two songs used as ending themes for Digimon Frontier, "Innocent: Mujaki na Mama de" (イノセント~無邪気なままで~) and "an Endless Tale" (with AiM). He starred in various other songs for the series, such as "Bokura no Digital World" (the "memorial" theme for the Adventure series), "Yūki o Uketsugu Kodomo-tachi e" and also several Christmas songs. He also performed a song for Transformers: Robots in Disguise.

On October 4, 2011, Wada announced via his blog that he was putting his career on hold in order to deal with a sudden metastasized cancer which had previously seen treatment in 2003.[3]

On April 3, 2016, he died unexpectedly from complications related to pharyngeal cancer.[4] His last single, "Seven〜tri. Version〜" was released only five days prior to his death.

International appearances

In July 2007, Wada made his first show in Brazil, doing a solo presentation and singing along other invited Japanese singers on the "Anime Friends".[5] This happened one year after Ayumi Miyazaki visited Brazil in another convention "ExpoAnime Brasil". He also visited the state of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil on October 14, 2007, during the Anima Weekend event. On December 15–16, 2007, he made a live presentation in the "Anime Festival XL" event in Santiago, Chile. In August 2008, he released a mini-album named "ever", which contains five original songs, with four of them composed and written by himself. In December 2008 he was performing in the "Animeku 08", in February the "AniCon", and in July the "Anime Friends" (Both in 2010) Events from "Yamato", in Brazil and Argentina. On June 5–6, 2010, he did 2 concerts in Monterrey, Mexico in the Santa Lucia Arena at the "Dengeki Live", a J-pop event and anime convention. In response to his metastasized cancer in 2011, he cancelled two appearances planned for Chile and Peru.

Discography

All of My Mind

Kazakami no Oka Kara

Other songs

References

  1. "Koji Wada Fallece a los 42 años" (in Spanish). Deculture.es. April 8, 2016. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  2. "和田光司|SOLID VOX". SOLID VOX. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
  3. "Digimon Singer Kouji Wada Puts Career on Hold Due to Cancer". Anime News Network. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  4. "Digimon Theme Song Singer Kouji Wada Passes Away - News - Anime News Network". Anime News Network. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  5. "Agitos da J-music" (in Portuguese). Rede Globo. July 16, 2010. Retrieved December 2, 2010.

External links

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