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Singer has Georgia on her mind

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  • Singer has Georgia on her mind

    Yomiuri, Japan
    Nov 5 2004

    Singer has Georgia on her mind

    by Ichiro Ue Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

    Georgia, a small country between Caspian Sea and Black Sea, is little
    known among the Japanese. A former Soviet republic that became
    independent in 1991, it is still struggling with economic reforms and
    beset by regional conflicts.

    One Japanese who does know the Caucasian country is 56-year-old
    singer Utako Watanabe.

    Watanabe first learned about the country through Bulat Okudzhava, a
    famous poet and writer who had a Georgian father and Armenian mother.


    She described her meeting with Okudzhava as epochal. He had a tough
    childhood because his father had been branded a political criminal
    during the Soviet era. Okudzhava used his guitar and voice to express
    the joys and sorrows of the Georgian and Russian people, and protest
    the meaninglessness of war.

    Watanabe visited Okudzhava in the suburbs of Moscow in 1989 after she
    had heard his "Song of Georgia," on an old album. Describing her
    first meeting with Okudzhava, Watanabe said, "It was as if we were
    old friends."

    Okudzhava made an exception for Watanabe, and sang "Song of Georgia"
    for her, accompanying himself on guitar, although he had told people
    around him he would not sing any more.

    She decided to become a singer at the age of 18 when she heard
    chanson at Ginpari, Japan's leading chanson cafe located in Ginza,
    Tokyo. Ginpari closed in 1990.

    Watanabe thought she had faced some difficult moments in her career
    as a chanson singer, but she changed her mind after Okudzhava "became
    the guiding light of my destiny."

    Watanabe sings songs about the soil of Georgia and her desire for it
    to find peace.

    A film about a family in Georgia, "Since Otar Left..." (titled
    "Yasashii Uso" in Japanese), received the Critics' Week Grand Prize
    at Cannes Film Festival in 2003.

    The movie is currently showing at a movie theater in Hibiya, Tokyo,
    and Watanabe will present a miniconcert there Sunday evening during
    which she will sing "Song of Georgia," in memory of Okudzhava, who
    died in 1997.
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