Kamen Rider - Songs

Songs

Opening themes
  • "Let's Go!! Rider Kick" (レッツゴー!!ライダーキック, Rettsu Gō!! Raidā Kikku?)
    • Lyrics: Shōtarō Ishinomori
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Hiroshi Fujioka with Male Harmony (メール・ハーモニー, Mēru Hāmonī?)
    • Episodes: 1-13
  • "Let's Go!! Rider Kick" (レッツゴー!!ライダーキック, Rettsu Gō!! Raidā Kikku?)
    • Lyrics: Shōtarō Ishinomori
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon (as Kōichi Fuji) with Male Harmony
    • Episodes: 14-88
  • "Rider Action" (ライダーアクション, Raidā Akushon?)
    • Lyrics: Shōtarō Ishinomori
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon
    • Episodes: 89–98
Ending themes
  • "Kamen Rider no Uta" (仮面ライダーの歌, Kamen Raidā no Uta?, "The Song of Kamen Rider")
    • Lyrics: Saburō Yatsude
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon (as Kōichi Fuji) with Male Harmony
    • Episodes: 1–71
  • "Rider Action" (ライダーアクション, Raidā Akushon?)
    • Lyrics: Shōtarō Ishinomori
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon
    • Episodes: 72–88
  • "Lonely Kamen Rider" (ロンリー仮面ライダー, Ronrī Kamen Raidā?)
    • Lyrics: Mamoru Tanaka
    • Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
    • Artist: Masato Shimon
    • Episodes: 89–98

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Famous quotes containing the word songs:

    What wondrous love is this
    That caused the Lord of bliss
    To bear the dreadful curse for my soul
    —Unknown. “What Wondrous Love is this!” L. 3-5, Dupuy’s Hymns and Spiritual Songs (1811)

    We can never see Christianity from the catechism:Mfrom the pastures, from a boat in the pond, from amidst the songs of wood- birds we possibly may.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    On a cloud I saw a child,
    And he laughing said to me,

    “Pipe a song about a Lamb”;
    So I piped with merry chear.
    “Piper pipe that song again”—
    So I piped, he wept to hear.

    “Drop thy pipe thy happy pipe
    Sing thy songs of happy chear”;
    So I sung the same again
    While he wept with joy to hear.
    William Blake (1757–1827)