The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Chanson singer makes his mark by running 3,058 km in a month

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Chanson singer Katsuyuki Kurai ran an amazing 3,000plus kilometers in a single month in May. e singer from Ota Ward, Tokyo, was also the only successful participan­t in a running event covering 423 kilometers between Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 74 hours on Aug. 6-9.

“Chanson singer runs 3,058 kilometers in a month!”

is headline appeared in the August issue of monthly magazine Runners, praising Kurai’s achievemen­t in the Satsuki Run & Walk event in May, in which participan­ts compete by measuring the distance they run or walk across the month using GPS.

Kurai, 39, performed the feat by making a round trip through Honshu from Shimonosek­i, Yamaguchi Prefecture,

up to Aomori.

His distance is extraordin­ary when compared to the second-place runner in this year’s Satsuki Run event, who traveled 1,323 kilometers, and the winner in last year’s event, who covered 2,257 kilometers.

e magazine’s September issue included a 10-page feature story focusing on his unparallel­ed performanc­e.

When Kurai is not in running shoes, he is a chanson singer with an enchanting voice who goes by the stage name Catsu. On Aug. 16, he appeared at a live music club in Shimbashi, Tokyo, to sing “La Vie en Rose” and other songs while playing the guitar.

Between songs, he made the audience laugh by connecting France, where chanson originates, with marathons.

“I have run the Medoc Marathon in Bordeaux eight times,”

he said. “I ran the full marathon in 3 hours 2 minutes while drinking about 20 glasses of local wine.”

Some people in the audience visited the club a er learning about his performanc­e as a runner.

Kurai won a chanson competitio­n in 2007, while a student at the University of Tsukuba.

Soon a er he began his singing career, his mentor Yoshiko Ishii, president of the Japan Chanson Associatio­n, died.

“I was totally at a loss, as I suddenly lost my supporter,” Kurai said.

With the popularity of chanson losing momentum, he looked for another way to express himself to the public and eventually chose running.

Kurai has a personal best of running a marathon in 2 hours 50 minutes. He is also enthusiast­ic about ultramarat­hon running, which is longer than the 42.195 kilometers of the traditiona­l marathon.

“Any error in water supply during a marathon can be devastatin­g,” he said. “Ultramarat­hons are interestin­g because they’re like life. Accidents can happen. But even if you fail at some point, you later have a chance to make up for it.”

Despite his increasing enthusiasm for marathon running, Kurai won a chanson competitio­n in 2018.

“My life as a singer has been full of twists and turns, similar to running an ultramarat­hon,” Kurai said.

He says that his current goal is to bring about an event titled “Sanson Chanson Marathon,” a rhyming pun combining sanson, which means “remote mountain village” in Japanese, with chanson and marathon.

“I want to sing chanson on the eve of a marathon event held in a mountain village and also win the marathon, all to contribute to the area’s revitaliza­tion,” he said. (Aug. 24)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Katsuyuki Kurai sings on Aug. 16, beside the magazine issue featuring his running.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Katsuyuki Kurai sings on Aug. 16, beside the magazine issue featuring his running.

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