Tokio Hot 100
Genre | Music chart show, talk |
---|---|
Running time | Approx. 4 hrs. (including commercials) |
Country | Japan |
Home station | J-Wave |
Hosted by |
Chris Peppler (main navigator, since 2006) Maki Kotsugi (info navigator) |
Created by | J-Wave |
Air dates | since October 2, 1988 |
Website | http://www.j-wave.co.jp/original/tokiohot100/ |
Tokio Hot 100 (トキオ・ホット・ワンハンドレッド Tokio Hotto Wanhandoredo), also known as McDonald's Tokio Hot 100, is the official music chart program of J-Wave and also the flagship program of the Japan FM League's Hot 100 music chart series.
History
- October 2, 1988 - premiered as Pioneer Tokio Hot 100
- October 7, 1989 - Prince's Batdance ruled for 10 weeks, one of the two songs to do so. (The other was Viva la Vida by Coldplay, which achieved it in 2008.)
- 2005 - Def Tech's My Way became the first J-pop song of the year in the program.
- April 5, 2009 - Nippon McDonald's became the official sponsor of the program.
- August 29, 2014 - tokyo Olympic became the official sponsor of the program.
Segments
- Last Week's Top 10, 13:00
- Shukan Chrispaper - latest news in the country and entertainment, 13:30
- Traffic Information, 14:02
- Welcome to Tokio Hot 100
- Flashback Star, 14:40
- Headline News, 14:56
- Mochikomi Recommen - song recommendations from a J-pop artist, 15:20
- Mix Countdown, 15:40
- Flashback Star, part 2, 15:50
- Traffic Information, part 2, 16:00
- This Week's Top 10 - the 10 most popular songs of the week, 16:04
TV Version
MTV Japan is the official TV partner of J-Wave for the program.[1]
Songs of the Year
- 1988: U2 — "Desire"
- 1989: Prince — "Batdance"
- 1990: Madonna — "Vogue"
- 1991: Stevie B — "Because I Love You (The Postman Song)"
- 1992: Shanice — "I Love Your Smile"
- 1993: Mariah Carey — "Dreamlover"
- 1994: Big Mountain — "Baby I Love Your Way"
- 1995: Diana King — "Shy Guy"
- 1996: Eric Clapton — "Change the World"
- 1997: Jamiroquai — "Cosmic Girl"
- 1998: Celine Dion — "My Heart Will Go On"
- 1999: Jamiroquai — "Canned Heat"
- 2000: Madonna — "Music"
- 2001: Janet Jackson — "All for You"
- 2002: Underworld — "Two Months Off"
- 2003: Beyoncé Knowles featuring Jay-Z — "Crazy in Love"
- 2004: Avril Lavigne — "Don't Tell Me"
- 2005: Def Tech — "My Way"
- 2006: Daniel Powter — "Bad Day"
- 2007: Ne-Yo — "Because of You"
- 2008: Coldplay - "Viva la Vida"
- 2009: Madonna — "Celebration"
- 2010: Maroon 5 - "Misery"
- 2011: Maia Hirasawa - "Boom!"
- 2012: Norah Jones - "Happy Pills"
- 2013: Daft Punk - "Get Lucky feat. Pharrell Williams"
- 2014: Pharrell Williams - "Happy"
Tokio Hot 100 Awards
This was started up in 1995 as a reward for most outstanding songs under the name J-Wave Awards, and individual performers since 1997.
(Note: Tokio Hot 100 Awards was cancelled in 2011 due to the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. A charity concert entitled TOKIO HOT 100 LIVE ~Heart to Heart~ was organized instead.)
Winners
1995
- the Cardigans - "Carnival"
1996
- Meja - "How Crazy Are You?"
1997
- Jamiroquai - "Virtual Insanity" (best song)
- Jamiroquai (best male artist)
- Chara (best female artist)
- Aerosmith (best group)
- Spice Girls (best character)
- Kenneth Brian "Babyface" Edmonds (best producer)
1998
- Celine Dion — "My Heart Will Go On" (best song)
- Eric Clapton (best male artist)
- Misia (best female artist)
- Oasis (best group)
- Chumbawamba (best character)
- Kenneth Brian "Babyface" Edmonds (best producer)
1999
- Jamiroquai — "Canned Heat" (best song)
- Lauryn Hill (best female artist)
- Shikao Suga (best male artist)
- TLC (best group)
- Ricky Martin (best character)
- Hikaru Utada (best new artist)
2000
- Janet Jackson — "Doesn't Really Matter" (best song)
- Madonna (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- M-Flo (best group)
- Mai Kuraki (best new artist)
2001
- Janet Jackson — "All for You" (best song)
- Hikaru Utada (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- Destiny's Child (best group)
- CHEMISTRY (best new artist)
2002
- Chitose Hajime — "Wadatsumi no Ki" (best song)
- Hikaru Utada (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- TLC (best group)
- Avril Lavigne (best new artist)
2003
- Beyoncé Knowles featuring Jay-Z — "Crazy in Love" (best song)
- Crystal Kay (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- EXILE (best group)
- Stacie Orrico (best new artist)
2004
- Ken Hirai — "Hitomi o Tojite" (best song)
- Alicia Keys (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- Orange Range (best group)
- Tokyo Jihen (best new artist)
2005
- Def Tech — "My Way" (best song)
- Madonna (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- Remioromen (best group)
- Def Tech (best new artist)
2006
- Daniel Powter — "Bad Day" (best song)
- Angela Aki (best female artist)
- Shikao Suga (best male artist)
- EXILE (best group)
- Ayaka (best new artist)
2007
- Alicia Keys — "No One" (best song)
- Kaela Kimura (best female artist)
- Ken Hirai (best male artist)
- EXILE (best group)
- Motohiro Hata (best new artist)
2008
- Coldplay - "Viva la Vida" (best song)
- Kaela Kimura (best female artist)
- Motohiro Hata (best male artist)
- EXILE (best group)
- Kimaguren (best new artist)
- Ken Hirai and Shikao Suga (Hall of Fame)
2009
- Kaela Kimura - "Butterfly" (best song)
- Shiho Ochi (Superfly) (best female artist)
- Motohiro Hata (best male artist)
- Rip Slyme (best group)
- Lady Gaga (best new artist)
2010
- Superfly - "Wildflower" (best song)
- JUJU (best female artist)
- Motohiro Hata (best male artist)
- EXILE (best group)
- Charice (best new artist)
References
External links
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