Saori Minami


, née, Akemi Uchima was born in Okinawa on July 2, 1954 to Japanese parents. In the 1970s she was active as an idol.

Biography

Saori Minami debuted with the single "17-sai" in the summer of 1971. The song reached the No. 2 position on the Oricon chart list, was the 11th best selling single of 1971 in Japan and catapulted her into stardom. The song came about after composer Kyōhei Tsutsumi asked Minami what her favourite song was, Minami replied with "Rose Garden" by Lynn Anderson and so Tsutsumi based "17-sai" on that song.
Together with fellow Japanese female entertainers Rumiko Koyanagi and Mari Amachi, Minami laid the foundations of the modern Japanese idol. Minami, Koyanagi and Amachi were dubbed the "San-Nin Musume". Before them, Hibari Misora, Chiemi Eri and Izumi Yukimura were promoted in the same fashion. In 1973, Amachi, Koyanagi and Minami were followed by Momoe Yamaguchi, Junko Sakurada and Masako Mori, who were known as "Hana No Chu 3 Trio".
Following the success of "17-sai", Minami was nominated for Best Newcomer of the Year at the 13th Japan Record Awards, but lost the title to Rumiko Koyanagi. She was invited to perform "17-sai" on the 22nd edition of Kōhaku Uta Gassen and eventually made 8 appearances on the show.
The two singles that followed "17-sai", "Shiokaze no Melody" and "Tomodachi", both reached the Oricon top 10. In the summer of 1972, "Junketsu" reached the #3 position on the Oricon charts and became one of her most successful singles. Its follow up, "Aishuu no Page", reached the same position and featured an intro spoken in English. In the spring of 1973 "Kizutsuku Sedai" was released, a single with Rock 'N' Roll influences which cracked the top 5. In the summer of that same year "Iro Zuku Machi" became one of her biggest successes and, according to Minami herself, "one of my most representative songs". She continued to release popular singles throughout the 1970s and "Hito Koishi Kute".
Minami retired from show business in 1978.

Personal life

Minami is married to photographer Kishin Shinoyama, and has a son, Akinobu Shinoyama.

Partial discography

Singles

Studio albums

EPs

Live albums

Compilations