Strawberry Flower was a Japanese music duo, mostly known for their work with Nintendo in creating songs for TV commercials for the ''
Pikmin
is a real-time strategy and puzzle video game series created by Shigeru Miyamoto, and published by Nintendo. The games focus on directing a horde of plant-like creatures called Pikmin to collect items by destroying obstacles, avoiding hazards, ...
'' franchise. Formed in late 2001 specifically to create a song for TV advertisements for ''
Pikmin
is a real-time strategy and puzzle video game series created by Shigeru Miyamoto, and published by Nintendo. The games focus on directing a horde of plant-like creatures called Pikmin to collect items by destroying obstacles, avoiding hazards, ...
'', Strawberry Flower made the song "
Ai no Uta". It became a sleeper hit, getting to #2 in the Japanese charts and becoming one of the best-selling singles in Japan in 2002. They later followed with more Pikmin-related single releases until 2004, totalling 1 million singles sold in their home country.
Although they kept largely inactive ever since, they briefly reunited in 2015 for the song "arukuhayasade", released independently and with no ties to Pikmin.
Most of their songs were released exclusively in Japan, but they got worldwide exposure in 2008, with the inclusion of two of their songs in the game ''
Super Smash Bros. Brawls soundtrack, gathering a cult following.
History
2001–2002: Formation and "Ai no Uta"
In 2001,
Nintendo
is a Japanese Multinational corporation, multinational video game company headquartered in Kyoto. It develops, publishes, and releases both video games and video game consoles.
The history of Nintendo began when craftsman Fusajiro Yamauchi ...
enlisted singer instrumentist Gan Matsumoto, credited as Takeshi Tomozuma in the project, to create music to be used in their then-upcoming GameCube title ''
Pikmin
is a real-time strategy and puzzle video game series created by Shigeru Miyamoto, and published by Nintendo. The games focus on directing a horde of plant-like creatures called Pikmin to collect items by destroying obstacles, avoiding hazards, ...
'', created by
Shigeru Miyamoto
is a Japanese video game designer, video game producer, producer and Creative director#Video games, game director at Nintendo, where he has served as one of its representative directors as an executive since 2002. Widely regarded as one o ...
. Tomozuma came up with "
Ai no Uta", and then called Tomoe Watanabe to record vocals, that way, forming the Strawberry Flower duo. The song was released as a single in December of that same year, climbing to #2 in the
Oricon
, established in 1999, is the holding company at the head of a Japanese corporate group that supplies statistics
Statistics (from German language, German: ', "description of a State (polity), state, a country") is the discipline that ...
charts in January 2002, becoming a massive hit and selling over 600,000 copies, outselling Japanese sales of ''Pikmin'' itself. The song did boost the game's sales though, eventually hitting over 500,000 copies sold in the country. "Ai no Uta" would prove itself a massive hit, being the 8th best selling single in 2002 in Japan, according to Oricon.
"Ai no Uta"'s lyrics tie in to the games, talking about the events from the game from the Pikmin's point of view. A version for the TV commercials, more directly talking about the Pikmin was also recorded, both versions were included in the Pikmin World soundtrack, released in May 2002.
Meanwhile, the single release had a B-side called "Namida ga Afureta", which talks about the game's events from Olimar's point of view. This one is exclusive to the "Ai no Uta" single.
Strawberry Flower's second single was a collection of three instrumental remixes of "Ai no Uta" titled "Pikmin Dance", released under the name "Strawberry Music Group".
In 2002, a French version entitled "Vos Meilleurs Amis" was released as a single in France by
Virgin France, also used in Pikmin TV commercials in the country. The song was recorded by a French singer named Juliette Katz. A shortened version of it, used in the ads, was also included in Pikmin World.
2004: "Tane no Uta"
Nintendo commissioned Strawberry Flower for promotional Pikmin music once again, this time, for TV commercials for the
GameCube
The is a PowerPC-based home video game console developed and marketed by Nintendo. It was released in Japan on September 14, 2001, in North America on November 18, 2001, in Europe on May 3, 2002, and in Australia on May 17, 2002. It is the suc ...
title ''
Pikmin 2''. The resulting single was "Tane no Uta", released in May 2004, based on the Japanese children's nursery rhyme "Koganemushi", with the lyrics adapted to talk about each Pikmin color.
The CD single also came with a cover of the Japanese nursery rhyme "Shabondama" and a remix of "Ai no Uta", with re-recorded vocals and instrumentation.
Just like "Ai no Uta" in the first game, "Tane no Uta" was not actually included in ''Pikmin 2'' in any form. However, "Ai no Uta" was included in this game as an easter egg.
2005–2014: Hiatus and worldwide exposure
Ever since "Tane no Uta", Strawberry Flower would not return to work with Nintendo or ''Pikmin'' anymore with new songs, despite the Pikmin series getting new installments in the following years.
However, "Ai no Uta" and "Tane no Uta" would be reused by Nintendo in other projects. The first of them was the 2008 crossover fighting game ''
Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', where both songs were included as background music for the ''Pikmin''-themed Distant Planet stage. The French version of "Ai no Uta" was also included. With the worldwide release of the game, that marked Strawberry Flower's first appearance worldwide, leading to a cult following among international ''Pikmin'' fans. Those songs did not return in future ''Super Smash Bros.'' games.
With the release of ''
Pikmin 3'' in 2013, "Ai no Uta" was once again used in advertisements for the game. This currently stands as the latest usage of Strawberry Flower music in Pikmin media.
2015: Brief reunion and "arukuhayasade"
February 2015 marked a brief reunion for the band with the single "arukuhayasade". It was their first released independently and worldwide, and was also the first with no ties to ''Pikmin'' or Nintendo, being written as a tie-in to a book of the same name.
Discography
Singles
References
{{Pikmin
Pikmin
Nintendo people
Japanese pop music groups