Few Japanese concepts have spread as far globally as âkawaii.â The wordâroughly translated to mean âcute,â but technically referring to a child-like, downright pitiable type of adorablenessâoften hovers around Japanese cultural exports, from cartoons to clothes. Just look at the recent unveiling of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics mascotsâmuch of the discussion centered around the nationâs knack for generating cuddly creatures. The adjectiveâpronounced âka-why-eeââhas been slapped onto everything from Japanese fashion to themed cafes, and is a lifestyle directive for many. Think of it as âpunkâ for the plush toy set.
Naturally, kawaii extends to music, too. Japanese artists who make inroads into the West often get labeled with the word, from the Harajuku-born blast of Kyary Pamyu Pamyu to the cute-meets-heavy metal sounds of Babymetal. Smaller scale artists are earning that tag too, thanks to a sound that usually merges busy future bass sounds with bells, xylophones, and other twinkles. A few corners of the internet have gone as far as to classify this new strain of pop as âkawaii bass.â
âI have my own universe now. People will draw pictures of my character and send it to me,â Keitaro Ujiie (aka Ujico) says, from a cafe in Shinjuku. Heâs referring to the snail-like character featured on the artwork and videos of his project Snailâs House. Heâs found himself at the forefront of this style, with every new album and EP he uploads to the internet selling fast and attracting thousands of fans. Alongside artists such as Yunomi and YUCâe, Snailâs House has become shorthand for âkawaii music.â
Yet this burgeoning community of Japan-based artists making âcuteâ music isnât that easy to peg down. While cuddlier sounds appear, they are often joined by heavier noises, like EDM-inspired bass drops, piercing synths, and fast beats. Most of these creations are aggressive. Ujiie has spent significant time staring at kawaii images on his Tumblr feed, but heâs just as interested in breakcore, fusion, and drum & bass.
âSnailâs House is where I make all my cute music, but for everything else I record as Ujico,â he says, explaining how he keeps himself from feeling creatively boxed in. He enjoys his more playroom-adjacent sounds, but turns out to be a musical omnivore. At one point, he plays me a recent fave saved on his smartphone, a distorted and busy EDM track miles away from Snailâs House cozy style. He says he has all sorts of other aliases for his harder projects.
Kawaii is an idea often misunderstood by those outside the country. While many simply equate it with Sanrio and Fruits magazine, it has a much more complicated history. It emerged in the 1970s, pushed forward by what Sharon Kinsella describes in her essay âCuties In Japanâ as a âcute handwriting crazeâ among teenagers, which was actually a semi-rebellion against strict writing rules. While kawaii would become more stereotypically cute in Japan, most of the exports to the rest of the world earning that tagâespecially the musical onesâconceal twists. Kyary Pamyu Pamyuâs music and videos imagine a grotesque take on kawaii, while Babymetalâs name speaks for itself. Even Japanese predecessors that Ujiie points out, such as Tomggg or Avec Avec, snuck all sorts of wonky stuff inside their cotton-candy-colored parts.
âWhen Iâm listening to songs frequently dubbed âkawaiiâ abroad, there was a feeling that it was painful to listen, because it is too conscious of being âkawaii,â says the musician who records as Aiobahn. He splits time between his hometown of Seoul and Tokyo, but focuses more on the Japanese community than the one in his native country. His music has also been called kawaii, which he disagrees with. He thinks the name is lazily applied because of his choice to use Japanese vocals and anime-style artwork.
âOne of the reasons could be anime culture,â the producer Yunomi says, about the recent interest in this music. The number of people around the world now repping their love of Japanese animation has grown significantly in recent years. Japanese animated imagery has become an easy visual stamp for musicians, and thereâs no shortage of artists across genres who draw inspiration from the country. I talked to one artist dabbling in âkawaii soundsâ named Cute Girls Doing Cute Things who claimed to be based in Tokyo âjust for aesthetic purposes.â They actually hail from Europe. I doubt they are the only one perpetuating this kind of ruse. âThey like music that they can feel fantasy with,â Yunomi says.
Itâs better to look at this generation of Japanese kawaii producers as artists who are adding new soundsâoften hard-edged onesâto a style thatâs often seen as being soft. Here are some of the artists giving new meaning to âcuteâ music in Japan.
Snailâs House
Ujiie says he grew up in a musical household, where Chopin and Sly And The Family Stone were played in equal measure, and various instruments owned by his father dotted the house. âI didnât play with them,â he says. âIt wasnât until 2011, after I listened to [Japanese jazz artist] Hiromi Uehara that I started trying to make my own music.â He adopted a trial-and-error approach to music, aided by a high school teacher who let him use the music room during free time, as well as a music-making cartridge for the Nintendo DS. He started creating songs using a laptop his father sent him while he was studying in New Zealand. âThat PC broke, so he had to send me a six-year-old one after that.â
That outdated technology taught Ujiie to work fast; his computer would overheat after about two hours. âI can output what is in my mind so fast. When Iâm musically thinking, itâs just likeâ¦letâs make this melody, OK.â With the latest Snailâs House release, Ordinary Songs 4, he spent a little longer getting specific elementsâsuch as distorted drumsâjust right. ââMy Holidayâ took the longest. One sound, the kick, was actually a bass. I compressed the fuck out of it. It was so hard to mix.â
âOrdinary Songs 4, I wanted to figure out how to make cute songs out of not-very-cute sounds,â he says. Hearing him talk about distorted drums, or how he played around with the âamenâ break, that reveals how much of his seemingly âkawaiiâ music has a more unnerving side. âI started making distorted sounds, things that normal people would be freaked out by. I took sounds that would hurt your ears on their own, or wouldnât be seen as cute on their ownâlike jungle rhythmâto make something cute.â
Yunomi
J-pop played a major role in shaping the maximalist sound of Yunomi. âI was inspired by Yasutaka Nakataâ[the producer of] Perfume, [member of] Capsuleâalong with all the artists from the EDM boom, such as Skrillex,â he says. Around the same time that he was discovering these artists, he met Nicamoq, another aspiring performer who added chirpy singing to some of Yunomiâs earliest creations. He returned the favor by shaping the sound of her idol project BPM15Q, featuring his mix of future bass and traditional Japanese instruments.
âSimply put, I like the way they sound,â he says of Japanese traditional sounds. âI do want to value Japanese traditions, though. If you think about âkawaii,â you start thinking, âWhatâs Japanese?â So I add some Japanese elements to it.â It adds character to hard-hitting numbers such as âOedo Controller,â which leaps from shamisen passages to fist-pumping stretches.
Yunomiâs become a more in-demand name in the last year, playing energetic sets across the country and finding more work in the J-pop industry, including as main producer for idol group CY8ER, which emerged from the ashes of BPM15Q. He even co-created a new label, Miraicha Records (literally, âfuture teaâ records) to highlight this dance-leaning sound with cuter elements. Critically, though, Yunomi likes a little roughness to his sound. âBecause we can make perfect instrumental tracks by computer, Iâm attracted to the opposite ideas, and I try to make that. This is my life work.â
YUCâe
YUCâe co-founded Miraicha Records with Yunomi, and brings a more unpredictable style to the fledgling label focused on future bass sounds. Based in Tokyo, she gained attention both domestically and internationally for her 2016 number âFuture Candy.â That song might be the definitive example of the kawaii sound to dateâits artwork and lyrics celebrate sugary goods, and the song opens with a rush of fluttery synths and YUCâeâs own high-pitched singing. Seconds later, everything is ripped apart by pitched-up vocal samples and rave-ready bass. It only grows more intense when YUCâe indulges in frantic vocal release late in the song.
This breakneck-approach informs many of the tracks on her debut full-length, Future Cake. Yet YUCâe also explores more unexpected corners, from digital-age swing on âNight Club Junkieâ to shimmering dance-pop on âTick Tock.â Listen long enough, and Future Cake starts sounding like an internet-born update on Japanâs Shibuya-kei era. But no matter which direction she chooses, YUCâe shreds conventional ideas of what âcuteâ sounds like and rearranges them into something harder-edged and constantly changing.
Antenna Girl
Of all the artists here, Antenna Girl skews closest to traditional J-pop. She performs dance numbers not far removed from the playroom-pop of Kyary Pamyu Pamyu or electro-leaning stylings of Yun*chi. Yet sheâs keenly curated sounds from this burgeoning kawaii scene for her compositions. Her 2017 debut full-length finds her working with pioneer Tomggg, along with the aforementioned Yunomi, the glitchier Rekanan, and the hookier Brinq. And sheâs collaborated with Aiobahn in the past, too. Yet even on her own, Antenna Girl leans into the high-energy side of kawaii music.
Nyankobrq
Producer Nyankobrqâs gateway into creating their own music was a âbullet hellâ shooter game. âThe reason why I started to make music was Touhou Arrange,â the Tottori-based producer says. They are referring to a music community focused on reworking the music from the video game Touhou Project. Before that, Nyankobrq says they listened primarily to big-name EDM acts such as Zedd and Skrillex, with a dollop of J-pop and anime music mixed in. But it was the vibrant scene built around tunes from a game starring magical girls shooting brightly colored projectiles that coaxed them to pick up a copy of FL Studio. âI have no instruments, and even if I did, I have no skill playing them. So Iâm doing everything by software. I shut myself up in my home to make music. I can be relaxed there the most.â
As Nyankobrq, theyâve moved beyond game reworks in favor of rumbling originals featuring chirpy electronics and chopped-up vocal samples inspired by fellow Japanese artists In The Blue Shirt and tofubeats. Last yearâs Black Cat captures Nyankobrqâs swift sound well, featuring songs cushioned by softer sounds and Nyankobrqâs own sing-rap. âIâm really happy when people say the voice is cute!â
Colate
Tokyoâs Colate serves up songs that clearly illustrate the tension at the heart of this new generation of kawaii creators. Last summerâs Kiss The Comet EP features tracks sporting titles like âGood Nightâ and âMelancholy Latte,â which spring to life on twinkling keyboard notes and are often supported by female vocalists such as Nanahira. Yet as sugary as they can get, Colateâs creations always swerve into crunchier territory. Sometimes, they transform into start-stop electro-pop; at their most extreme they become submerged in bass gurgles (see âEDM Sex Machineâ). They might sound Sanrio-approved at first, but Colate has a gritty side.
Aiobahn
Min-Hyuk Kim started the Aiobahn project in 2015, drawing from an eclectic mix of influences. âSince I was into Swedish House Mafia, I got a lot of influence from neighboring artists. Recently, Iâve been influenced a lot by J-pop of the 1990s and Future House.â His music, fittingly, glides from heavier dance tracks accented by vocal samples to something like the recent single âIslands,â an elastic, disco-leaning dance track. Although many of his songs touch on the style (and his choice in imagery makes it a natural adjective), Kimâs interest in exploring different sounds often makes the âkawaiiâ tag feel suffocating.
âSometimes when I look at overseas media, things are treated as kawaii just because they have Japanese lyrics,â he says, acknowledging that his use of the language and anime-style art often lands him in this territory. He remains committed to exploring different spaces moving forward. âI donât really know what will happen in the future, but recently I have focused on making future house.â
Hercelot
Compared to the other creators on this list, this Tokyo-based producer is a veteran. Theyâve released music via Japanese netlabels for years now, highlighted by 2013âs Wakeup Fakepop, a cartoon dust devil of an album loaded up with samples and breakbeats. That setâs colorful cover art and Technicolor whirlwind sounds like a clear predecessor to the new crop of performers pushing into even more maximalist territory. Yet Hercelot remains restless. Last yearâs slowalk finds them shifting into more reflective territory, combining Books-style sampling with an assortment of bells, 8-bit blurps, and more sounds straight from the playroom. But rather than create something hyperactive, Hercelot crafts an album of thoughtful numbers that act as soundtracks to everyday. It shows that kawaii sounds can mature, too.