Yoyoka_Soma

Yoyoka Soma

Yoyoka Soma

Musical artist


Yoyoka Soma (Japanese: 相馬世世歌), known mononymously as YOYOKA (よよか), is a Japanese drummer from Ishikari.[1] In 2018, at age 8, she gained international attention for an online video in which she covered Led Zeppelin's "Good Times Bad Times", which was uploaded to Vimeo as her entry for the 2018 Hit Like a Girl contest.[1][2] As of October 2019, the video has 3.2 million views[3] and David Grohl, Ian Paice, and Robert Plant all praised the video and her drumming capabilities.[4] She has stated that John Bonham, Chris Coleman, and Benny Greb are her favorite drummers[3] and Rage Against the Machine her favorite band.[5]

Quick Facts Born, Origin ...

Childhood and career

Soma started drumming at age 2 and performing in concerts at age 4.[2] In 2015, she began playing in her family's band, Kaneaiyoyoka,[1] with her parents, Akifumi and Rie Soma.[6] At age 6 during her kindergarten years, she released her first music CD.[7] Soma and her family have discussed how Japan and its traditional school system has been stifling to her music career and aspirations, preventing her from playing drums during her school life because of her higher skill level than the other students. She also spoke out against the idea of collectivism in Japan that prevents individuality and the idea of any individual person standing out as unique.[8]

Performances

When she was 8, she appeared as the youngest performer ever recorded at the Rising Sun Rock Festival and later at Summer Sonic Festival on the stage reserved for Fall Out Boy. She went on to be a guest drummer for Cyndi Lauper on her last tour day at the Tokyo Orchard Hall.[9]

She has appeared twice on the American television talk show Ellen[10] and in advertisements for sports apparel maker Nike, Italian luxury fashion brand Moncler and Japanese casual wear designer uniqlo. Her online videos have been viewed over 62 million times.[1] She was listed by Newsweek Japan as one of the top 100 Japanese people that the world respects.[11]


References

  1. "9-yr-old Hokkaido drummer's viral fame opens up new opportunities overseas". Hokkaido Shimbun. 27 Sep 2019.
  2. Murasaki, Kevin (April 19, 2022). "Japanese Society and School System Might Be Failing 12 Year Old Drum Prodigy". Japan Insider. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
  3. "特集:世界が尊敬する日本人100" [Special feature: 100 Japanese people respected by the world]. Newsweek Japan (in Japanese). April 23, 2019. Retrieved July 23, 2022.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Yoyoka_Soma, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.