Parody song medley. Classic Japanese hits and recommended popular songs.
I gathered and reviewed the original songs that are often used for parody lyrics in TV commercials and comedy routines.
Besides their popularity, there are clear reasons they get chosen—catchy rhythms and tempos, phrase structures that make it easy to insert alternate lyrics, and more.
- Funny parody song. A laugh-out-loud popular parody track.
- Guaranteed Laughs: A Collection of Parody Songs That Fire Up the Karaoke Party!
- Nostalgic song medley. Classic Japanese hits and recommended popular songs.
- A popular anime song medley. Classic and popular anime songs.
- Summer song medley. Timeless and popular tracks that color the summer.
- A medley of crowd-pleasing classics. Iconic Japanese songs and recommended popular tracks.
- Jazz medley. World-famous masterpieces and recommended popular songs.
- [J-POP] For those who want to listen to everything! A compilation of medleys by popular artists
- [Latest & Classic] Medley of Popular Vocaloid Songs [Compilation]
- Packed with masterpieces! Karaoke songs recommended for women of the Yutori generation
- [Karaoke] A collection of easy-to-sing songs by THE BLUE HEARTS
- Get the Laughs! Funny Karaoke Songs That Hype Up the Crowd
- [Parody Songs & Chants] Drinking Songs That Hype Up Karaoke
Parody Song Medley: Classic J-Pop Masterpieces and Recommended Popular Tracks (1–10)
FUNK FUJIYAMAKome Kome Club
A hit song by Kome Kome Club that was also used in a commercial.
It’s quintessentially Kome Kome Club, a highly entertainment-driven track.
With lyrics from a foreigner’s perspective—like “harakiri,” “kamikaze,” and “Fujiyama”—and a funny music video, it’s Kome Kome Club at their best and an absolute blast.
Come see me, I need you.GO-BANG’S

A girls’ band that rose to prominence during the band boom of the 1980s.
This song was used in a commercial for Alpen ski equipment, which instantly brought them nationwide recognition.
The band disbanded in 1994, but it is currently active as Kaori Moriwaka’s solo project.
Kiss me right nowLINDBERG

It was used as the theme song for the hit drama “I Love You the Most in the World!” and became a huge success despite the group having just debuted.
They say the members all watched the first broadcast together.
Although they once disbanded, it’s still fresh in our memories that they reunited in 2009.
Parody song medley: Classic J-pop masterpieces and recommended popular songs (11–20)
DiamondsPRINCESS PRINCESS

A signature song by Princess Princess (abbreviated as Puri-Puri), pioneers of girls’ bands who were active from the 1980s to the 1990s.
It was a long-running hit, staying on the Oricon charts for 67 weeks.
The track that ignited the Puri-Puri boom.
the first strong spring windCandies

The original idols.
Ran-chan, Sue-chan, Miki-chan—haven’t you heard them at least once? This is without a doubt one of the songs that best represents Candies.
Idols from that era not only had good looks but were also excellent singers.
Sue-chan’s passing is still fresh in many people’s memories, and even today there’s the National Candies Federation (Zen-Kyan-Ren) to show how enduring their popularity is.
Harbor Yoko, Yokohama, YokosukaDown Town Boogie Woogie Band

An impressive song title and narration like lines from a drama.
Sound effects like whistles and sirens.
And above all, “Hey you, what are you to that girl?!”—a shockingly great line in a masterpiece.
I’ve never heard another song like this, before or since.
A must-listen.
WONT’ BE LONGBubblegum Brothers

The original “WON’T BE LONG.” It’s still fresh in our memory that Kumi Koda and EXILE covered it.
Brother Tom is now known as an actor, but it seems not many people know that he sang a song that took the 90s by storm.





