The Mi-ha

"The Mi-ha" (ザ・ミーハー, Za Mīhā) is the fourth single by Japanese singer/songwriter Chisato Moritaka. Released by Warner Pioneer on April 25, 1988, the single was Moritaka's first foray in songwriting in her career. The song was used in a series of Pioneer answering machine telephone commercials featuring Moritaka.[1][2][3]

"The Mi-ha"
Single by Chisato Moritaka
from the album Mi-ha
LanguageJapanese
B-side"Mi-ha (Original Version)"
ReleasedApril 25, 1988 (1988-04-25)
Recorded1988
Genre
Length5:52
LabelWarner Pioneer
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Yukio Seto
Chisato Moritaka singles chronology
"Get Smile"
(1988)
"The Mi-ha"
(1988)
"Alone"
(1988)
Music video
The Mi-ha on YouTube

Background

"Mi-ha" is a slang term for a person obsessed with following vulgar fads and trends and is not well-educated. It usually refers to specific young women, but can also be applied to men. The term was believed to have been originated from actor Chōjirō Hayashi in his 1927 film Chigo no Kenpō. Mi-ha is written in either katakana as "ミーハー" or in hiragana as "みいはあ".[4][5]

Moritaka wrote "The Mi-ha" after being asked by her management to come up with some material. She commented that the cover photo is among her favorites.[6]

Reception

"The Mi-ha" peaked at No. 29 on Oricon's singles chart and sold 29,000 copies.[3]

Other versions

Different remixes of "Mi-ha" were released in the 1989 greatest hits album Moritaka Land and the 1991 remix album The Moritaka.

Moritaka re-recorded the song and uploaded the video on her YouTube channel on January 25, 2014.[7] This version is also included in Moritaka's 2014 self-covers DVD album Love Vol. 6.[8] In addition, she recorded a newer version titled "Mi-ha (2015 Ver.)", which was uploaded on YouTube on June 12, 2015 and included in Love Vol. 9.[9][10]

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Chisato Moritaka; all music is composed and arranged by Hideo Saitō.

No.TitleLength
1."The Mi-ha (Special Mi-ha Mix)" (Za Mīhā (Supesharu Mīhā Mikkusu) (ザ・ミーハー (スペシャル・ミーハー・ミックス)))5:52
2."Mi-ha (Original Version)" (Mīhā (Orijinaru Vājon) (ミーハー (オリジナル・ヴァージョン)))4:54

Chart positions

Charts (1988) Peak
position
Japanese Oricon Singles Chart 29

Cover versions

  • Taiwanese singer An Ke Li covered the song in Mandarin Chinese as "Dāi Dāi de Nǚhái" (呆呆的女孩; lit. "Dumb Girl") in her 1989 debut album Niánqīng Dàodǐ (年輕到底; Young to the End).[11]

References

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