Songs with titles that start with “ge”
How many songs can you instantly recall when asked for tracks whose titles start with “ge” (げ)?
In word games like shiritori, things suddenly get tricky when voiced consonants become the theme, don’t they?
この記事では、タイトルが「ge(げ)」で始まる楽曲を紹介します。
You might think you can’t come up with many, but once you look, you’ll find plenty you know and go, “Oh right, that one too!”
Why not use this for song-title shiritori and other word games?
- Compilation of Vocaloid songs with titles starting with 'Ge'
- Songs with titles that start with 'Ke'
- Songs with titles that start with 'gi'
- Songs with titles that start with “Gu.” Great for your karaoke selection!
- Songs with titles starting with “E” [Great for karaoke and shiritori, too!]
- A roundup of Vocaloid songs with titles that start with “Ke”
- Useful for song-title shiritori! Songs with titles that start with “ga”
- Summary of Vocaloid songs with titles that start with “Ga” (が)
- Songs with titles that start with “Go”
- A Compilation of Vocaloid Songs Whose Titles Start with “Gi”
- Collection of Vocaloid songs with titles starting with “Go”
- Vocaloid songs that start with “Gu.” Packed with lots of popular tracks!
- A roundup of Japanese songs whose titles start with “ji,” from buzzworthy tracks to popular hits.
Songs with titles starting with 'Ge' (201–210)
GET THE GLORYOrange Spiny Club

GET THE GLORY by Orange Spiny Club, a rock band from Ibaraki Prefecture.
Featured on their 3rd mini-album, Seikatsu Nante, this track’s lyrics capture feelings about growing up and a passion for self-actualization.
Since forming in 2012, they’ve taken on countless challenges and continued to evolve—and that musicality shines through in this song as well.
It’s a track that fills you with the courage to face difficulties.
It’ll give your tomorrow a push forward!
Songs with titles starting with “Ge” (211–220)
moonlightTatsuya Kitani × Harumaki Gohan

The sonic world woven by Tatsuya Kitani and Harumaki Gohan paints a journey of longing for what’s lost and a quest for self-discovery.
Released as a digital single in June 2022, this work brims with warmth, as if offering words of encouragement and staying close to the listener’s heart.
It’s a song for those moments when you feel you might lose sight of who you are, or when you’re about to take on a new challenge.
If you listen closely under the moonlight, it will surely resonate deeply within you.
Gera Gera Po SongKing Cream Soda

It’s a famous song alongside “Yo-kai Exercise No.
1.” Released in 2014 as King Cream Soda’s debut single, it served as the first opening theme for the anime Yo-kai Watch from episodes 1 to 36 and episode 51.
The vocal phrases really stick in your head.
plotWhale Night City × Soshi Sakiyama

A collaborative track by Kujira Yoru no Machi—known as the band that creates fantasy—and singer-songwriter Soshi Sakiyama.
Elements of post-rock, a Latin-flavored interlude, and emotionally charged vocals intertwine exquisitely to produce a dramatic world.
The lyrics deftly portray the protagonist’s feelings as they waver between reality and ideal.
It carries a subtly mysterious atmosphere, a piece you find yourself immersed in before you know it.
Kigashira, an umbrella, and SundaySukima Switch

It’s a heartbreak song about a man walking through the city under a clear vinyl umbrella, remembering the days he spent with the girlfriend who left him on a rainy Sunday.
The breakup words came from her, but he says the cause lies with himself—there were so many days they couldn’t meet, and he kept making her endure her loneliness.
It’s a bittersweet song.
Illusory RhapsodyFei-P

It’s a Vocaloid song with piano sounds that are pleasant to the ear.
It also features violin, making it a great pick for those who love string instruments.
The piece centers on a man and a woman, each embodying the timbre of the piano and the violin.
It expresses the pain of a love where “you want to convey your feelings but just can’t.”
I tried singing an a cappella song that lifts your spirits.Baby boo

Did you know there are cafés called “utagoe kissa” (singing cafés)? They’re a bit different from karaoke bars or snack bars: they’re cafés where all the customers sing together in chorus.
An a cappella group closely connected with these singing cafés is Baby Boo.
They’re a five-member male group formed in 1996 who made their major debut in 2002.
Seeking to improve further, they began frequenting Tomoshibi, one of the oldest and most established utagoe kissa.
They released four albums supervised by Tomoshibi, which helped solidify their a cappella career.





