Tokyo Idol Festival
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at [[:ja:TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL]]; see its history for attribution.
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{{Translated|ja|TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL}}
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Tokyo Idol Festival | |
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Genre | J-pop |
Frequency | Annually |
Location(s) | Tokyo, Japan |
Inaugurated | August 2010 |
Attendance | 80,000 (2017) |
Leader | Rino Sashihara (2017–2021) Neru Nagahama (2021–now) |
Website | www |
The Tokyo Idol Festival (stylized in all caps; abbreviated as TIF) is an annual music festival featuring live performances by female idol groups and solo idols from all over Japan.
History
The first edition of the Tokyo Idol Festival was held in 2010 in Shinagawa.[1]
In 2011, the location of the festival was moved to Odaiba.[2]
In 2014, The Wall Street Journal included the TIF as one of five places in Japan to enjoy summer music festivals.[3]
In 2017, more than 200 idol groups and about 1,500 idols performed, attracting more than 80,000 spectators.[citation needed]
The festival was held completely online in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in hybrid form in 2021.[2]
Editions
2010
Dates
- August 6 – Night before festival
- August 7 – Day/Night 1
- August 8 – Day/Night 2
2010 Artists |
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As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[4]
|
2011
Dates
- August 24–26 – Nights before festival[5]
- August 27 – Day 1
- August 28 – Day 2
- August 29 – Night after festival[5]
2011 Artists |
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As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[6]
|
2012
Dates
- August 3 – Night before festival
- August 4 – Day 1
- August 5 – Day 2
2012 Artists | |
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As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[7]
|
2013
Dates
- July 27 – Day 1
- July 28 – Day 2
2013 Artists | |
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As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[8]
|
2014
Dates
- August 2 – Day 1
- August 3 – Day 2
2014 Artists | |
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As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.
|
2015
Dates
- July 25 – Night before festival
- August 1 – Day 1
- August 2 – Day 2
2015 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[9]
|
2016
Dates
- August 5 – Day 1
- August 6 – Day 2
- August 7 – Day 3
2016 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[10]
|
2017
Dates
- August 4 – Day 1
- August 5 – Day 2
- August 6 – Day 3
2017 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[11]
|
2018
Dates
- August 3 – Day 1
- August 4 – Day 2
- August 5 – Day 3
2018 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[12]
|
2019
Dates
- August 2 – Day 1
- August 3 – Day 2
- August 4 – Day 3
2019 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[13]
|
2020
Dates
- October 2 – Day 1
- October 3 – Day 2
- October 4 – Day 3
2020 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[14]
|
2021
Dates
- October 1 – Day 1 – Canceled due to weather[15]
- October 2 – Day 2
- October 3 – Day 3
2021 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[16]
|
2022
Dates
- August 5 – Day 1
- August 6 – Day 2
- August 7 – Day 3
2022 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[17]
|
2023
Dates
- August 4 – Day 1
- August 5 – Day 2
- August 6 – Day 3
2023 Artists | |
---|---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[18]
|
2024
Dates
- August 2 – Day 1
- August 3 – Day 2
- August 4 – Day 3
2024 Artists |
---|
As listed on the official Tokyo Idol Festival website.[19]
|
References
- ^ "ナタリー - [Power Push] ニコナタ(音楽)アイドリング!!!インタビュー (1-2)". Natalie (in Japanese). Retrieved 2013-11-16.
- ^ a b "TIF2024について". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2024 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-03.
- ^ Hongo, Jun (25 July 2014). "5 Places in Japan to Enjoy Summer Music Festivals". Wall Street Journal.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2010". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ a b "TOKYO IDOL FES後夜祭でアイドリング!!!、風男塾らトーク". Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "LINEUP | TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2011". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2012". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2013". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2015". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2016". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2017". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2018". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2019". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2020". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL. Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "【TIF2021】10月1日(金)開催中止のお知らせ". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2021". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2022". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2023". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
- ^ "TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2024". TOKYO IDOL FESTIVAL 2024 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-02.
External links
- Official website
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Genres and styles |
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- Commercial song [ja]
- Gakusēka (student song) [ja]
- Kōka (school song) [ja]
- Ryōka (dormitory song) [ja]
- Daigaku-Ōenka (cheering song of university) [ja]
- Enzetsuka/Enka
- Gunka (military song)
- Jazz
- Kayōkyoku
- Senji-kayō [ja]
- Gunkoku-kayō [ja]
- Radio calisthenics song
- Ryūkōka
- Shichōsonka (municipality song) [ja]
- Shōka [ja]
- Manshū-Shōka [ja]
- Shin-min'yō [ja]
1945–present |
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1970–present |
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1990–present |
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"Big 10" (as of 2024[update]) | |
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Others |
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- iTunes Store
- Apple Music
- Google Play Music
- Amazon Music
- Spotify
- KKBox (the successor of LISMO Unlimited)
- RecoChoku [ja]
- Music.jp [ja]
- Mora
- Dwango.jp
- E-Onkyo music
- Oricon Music Store
- Line Music
- MySound [ja]
- OTOTOY [ja]
- AWA [ja]
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