Soeda Azenbō (Japanese: 添田 唖蝉坊, romanized: Soeda Azenbō) (1872–1944) was a Japanese singer and lyricist, a prominent figure of the enka style in the Meiji era and later.[2] His son was the author and critic Soeda Tomomichi [ja].
Selected works
Gunshin Hirose chūsa (軍神広瀬中佐, Commander Hirose, the martial spirit) (1904)
Ā kane no yo (あゝ金の世, O this world of money) (1906)
Nogi taishō no uta (乃木大将の歌, Song of General Nogi) (1912)
Makkuro bushi (真っ黒節, The pitch-black stanzas) (1913)
Rōdōmondai no uta (労働問題の歌, Song of the labor problem) (1919)
Kanekane bushi (金々節, The golden stanzas) (1925)
Seikatsu sensen ijō ari (生活戦線異状あり, Something wrong on the front lines of life) (1930)
Susume shintaisei (進め新体制, Advance, New Order) (1940)
^添田 Soeda, 唖蝉坊 Azenbō; Lewis, Michael (January 14, 2009). A Life Adrift: Soeda Azembō, Popular Song, and Modern Mass Culture in Japan (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN041559216X.
^E. Taylor Atkins, A History of Popular Culture in Japan: From the Seventeenth Century to the Present , Bloomsbury Academic, 2017