Mutual-love songs that are easy for women to sing at karaoke
This is a song list of easy-to-sing karaoke tracks recommended for women.
We’ve selected songs from a wide range of eras that have smooth, easy melodies, don’t require too wide a vocal range, and have tempos that aren’t too fast or too slow.
They’re all hit songs, so many of the choruses should be singable even without practice.
Top 10 easy-to-sing mutual love songs for women at karaoke
Orihime and BABY feat. Shio Leilabedhead

This is Neguse’s first duet, a bittersweet song that overlays the Tanabata tale of Orihime and Hikoboshi onto modern romance.
With a range of G#3 to D#5, it’s an easy key for a male-female duet, and it’s also great for two women to trade lines—highly recommended! It’s a heart-fluttering song to sing with someone you like.
In Reira Shio’s female part, the low notes are key.
Lower tones tend to get stuck in the throat and sound muffled, so make sure to let them resonate.
Try raising your eyebrows, take more air than you think you need, and sing as if you’re releasing the voice slowly right in front of your eyebrows.
That way, the resonance shifts from the throat to the head, making it easier to hear yourself and sing comfortably.
In general, when you sing, it helps to focus less on “producing sound” and more on “resonating through the body,” so keep that in mind!
Happinessaiko

A number by singer-songwriter aiko that straightforwardly sings of overflowing happiness.
The lyrics, which make you realize that the ordinary days spent with your lover are the true treasure, beautifully portray the preciousness of mutual love.
Listen to it under the gentle summer sunlight, and it feels as if your heart fills with the tenderness right beside you.
Released in May 2007 as her 21st single and also included on the album “Himitsu,” the song became widely known for being performed at the 58th NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen that same year.
It drew attention at the time as well, with the B-side being used in a commercial.
It’s a heartwarming song about mutual love that we especially want those in the midst of a happy romance to hear.
Love WindLila Ikuta

This is a solo song by Ikuta Lila, the vocalist of YOASOBI.
Rather than an upbeat, belted number, it has a relaxed and gentle tone.
The vocal range is F#3 to E5, so there are plenty of high notes, but if you approach it with head voice as your base, I think the pitch is relatively easy to catch.
If you switch to falsetto without hesitation for the high parts in the chorus, it becomes very easy to sing, so definitely give it a try!
Love VacationThe Peanuts

It was released by The Peanuts in 1963.
It’s one of their hit songs and is still covered by many people today.
I think it’s charming and alluring when two close female friends sing it imitating The Peanuts.
With its catchy lyrics and melody, it appeals to a wide range of ages.
Like when we first metEvery Little Thing

It was released in 1997 as Every Little Thing’s fifth single.
It was also used as the commercial song for Morinaga’s ICE BOX.
It’s a refreshing, energetic track that makes you want to hum along while riding a bicycle.
It’s a song that makes you want to sing your heart out, full of excitement.
The Maiden with Flaxen HairHitomi Shimatani

Released by Hitomi Shimatani in May 2002, this song is a celebrated piece that portrays a refreshing romance.
It expresses a young girl’s feelings of love through dreamlike imagery, beautifully harmonizing with scenes of landscape and nature.
The lyrics, imbued with youth and purity, are complemented by her clear, translucent vocals, capturing the brilliance of innocent love in full.
Featured in a commercial for Kao Essential Damage Care Shampoo, it became a major hit, peaking at No.
4 on the Oricon Weekly Chart.
With its broad, expansive melody and an elegant tone that sways like hair in the wind, it carries a familiar charm that invites everyone to hum along.
coarse sugarAimyon

Aimyon’s classic “Zarame.” Aimyon has many great songs, but this one is especially captivating for its emotional vocals.
The part where that quality shines the most is, of course, the chorus.
The chorus features emotional singing that makes effective use of falsetto.
Falsetto might sound challenging, but because the pitch gap before and after the falsetto is wide, it’s surprisingly easy to produce.
The rest is built around mid-tempo phrases in the low to mid register, so unless your voice is extremely raspy, it’s a song that’s quite easy to sing.






