Off Course Kazumasa Oda and Yasuhiro Suzuki began performing together in 1964 while the two were in
Seiko Gakuin Junior High School. In 1969, they formed the band The Off Course, which they later renamed to Off Course. The pair worked as a duo for their first six albums. Oda primarily played keyboards and Suzuki played guitars, with the two sharing songwriting and vocals. For their seventh album, in 1979, Off Course added three new permanent members and moved to more of a pop/rock sound. Oda and Suzuki continued to provide the vast majority of the songwriting and lead vocals. After five albums as a five-man band, Suzuki left the group in 1982 to pursue a solo career. The remaining members continued on for four more albums. Off Course officially came to an end after their final concert on February 26, 1989.
Solo career In 1985, Oda collaborated with
Yumi Matsutoya and Kazuo Zaitsu and released the No. 1 hit single "Imadakara". It was mostly written by Matsutoya and Oda, and played by the former
Sadistic Mika Band members. In the same year, Oda began his own solo career. His first solo album
K.Oda (1986) was produced by Oda and
Grammy Award-winning recording engineer
Bill Schnee, who was known for his work with
Steely Dan,
Olivia Newton-John,
Boz Scaggs,
Pablo Cruise, and
Huey Lewis and the News. Schnee was one of Oda's friends, and had also worked on the Off Course albums. Oda's solo debut album was recorded by many influential musicians;
Jeff Porcaro on drums,
David Hungate on bass,
Dann Huff on guitar and others. Three years later from release of
K.Oda, he released self-produced studio album
Between the Word and Heart. Around that year, the work as Off Course was getting destroyed. He released third studio album
Far East Cafe in 1989. In this album,
Nathan East performed bass guitar, but other instruments and chorus were mainly recorded by several Japanese musicians. The title of the album was also his management office name. In later year, he has run same-titled café. In 1991, he wrote the theme song for
Tokyo Love Story, the drama series which was broadcast by
Fuji Television. At first, he wrote the song called "Far East Club Band Song", but the producer Akira Ota refused that song and ordered Oda to write another song. Eventually, "Far East Club Band Song" was featured as theme song on another program, and instead of "Far East", he wrote "Love Story wa Totsuzen ni". On February 6 of same year, it was released as the double A-side single with "Oh! Yeah!" (It was used as the background music on TV advertisement of
The Dai-ichi Mutual Life Insurance Company.) The single sold nearly 2,600,000 copies and became best-selling compact disc in Japan at that time. At the stage now, it is ninth best-selling singles in Japan. Because of these succeeded tie-up, a lot of his songs were used as theme songs for advertisements, movies, and TV dramas in later years. After the hit of "Oh! Yeah!", Oda released same-titled first compilation album. Following the success of the single, this album sold over 1.5 million copies. In the 21st century, he released three albums and all of them reached number one on the official Japanese music chart, Oricon. Above all, compilation album
Jiko Best (2002) sold over 2,200,000 copies. With the release of his album
Soukana in 2005, he became the oldest solo music artist to reach number one on Oricon's album chart. His 2007 single "Kokoro" also made him the oldest solo music artist to reach number one on Oricon's single's chart. (This record has since been surpassed by
Junko Akimoto, in 2009). In 2018 he released a single which included the song "Kono michi o", theme song for
TBS drama
Black Pean. Oda returns with "Sono saki ni aru mono", theme song for season 2 (2024). == Discography ==