
Negishi, whose 1967 “Sparko Box” prototype is among several devices credited with ushering in Japan’s karaoke craze, died from natural causes in January at age 100.
Negishi founded and ran a company that assembled car stereos for automobile manufacturers in northern Tokyo. A regular listener to a singalong radio show broadcast in Japan at the time, he hooked a spare tape deck up to a microphone and mixing circuit so he could hear himself singing over music.
“When I asked the factory engineer, he said, ‘It’s easy,’” Negishi recalled in an account published by the All-Japan Karaoke Industrialist Association, an industry body for Japan’s karaoke operators. “So, I attached a microphone input terminal to the car stereo and created something like the prototype of a jukebox.”

“It works!” he told Alt, recalling the moment he heard his voice coming through the speakers alongside the music. “That’s all I was thinking. Most of all, it was fun. I knew right away I’d discovered something new.”
Marketing the device as a Sparko Box, he sold them alongside lyrics cards and reportedly produced and installed around 8,000 around Japan, mainly at bars and restaurants. By the time Negishi stopped selling the products in the 1970s, several rival machines had been invented and taken to market.
“At that time, it was not customary to sing in stores, so it may have been inevitable that (the Sparko Boxes were) sold as background music,” reads Negishi’s entry on the All-Japan Karaoke Industrialist Association’s website. “Now that I think about it, it’s a bit of a shame.”
The industry body does not credit a single person with inventing karaoke (which literally translates as “empty orchestra”), but instead recognizes several people who independently created machines in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Negishi did not patent his invention, and electronics manufacturers soon began producing and marketing their own versions. By the 1980s, “karaoke boxes” had swept Japan, with private rooms overtaking bars and restaurants as the main venues for Japan’s amateur singers. Subsequent developments, including the introduction of video karaoke and networked karaoke systems, helped the phenomenon spread across Asia and the world in the following decades.
Today, Japan is home to more than 8,000 dedicated karaoke box venues, while 131,500 bars are equipped with karaoke machines — a market worth a combined 387.9 billion yen ($2.6 billion) in 2022, according to estimates from the All-Japan Karaoke Industrialist Association.
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i wonder if they used a karaoke machine at his wake, and if so, what songs did they choose?
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“i was arrested for lip-syncing karaoke.”
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source credits: cnn, oscar holland, mai nishiyama, hiroki yoda
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I heard this story on Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me yesterday. 🙂
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his story is so interesting
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Such a fun post! Yeah, I wondered that too; I would have made sure that he got his congregation to sing a few happy songs at his wake. Thanks Beth, for this interesting snippet of a man‘s life.
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my pleasure
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Interesting story!
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I think so, too –
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Hi Beth, lots of people lost out of making a lot of money because they didn’t patent their inventions.
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yes, I think they were just too trusting or it never crossed their mind
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Probably both
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Very interesting. I love Steven Wright. A very funny guy!
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he is a great humorist
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I loved his early routines. One was that he had to fold up his life size map of the USA! Cracked me up!
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<3
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Wonderful story. That would be a very interesting book.
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you’re right, I hope that someone close to him will write his story
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My wife once won a Karaoke competition, singing ‘Johnny B-Good’. I have never attempted to sing at a Karaoke event, as I am tone-deaf!
Best wishes, Pete.
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excellent! I’m a horrible singer but I’ve done it just for fun –
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What a question about his wake and send off! 🥰
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)))
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Great story, Beth. I also wonder if they used a karaoke machine at his wake. That would be very fitting.
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it really would and he probably would have loved them to do that
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Yes!
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The rest is everlasting history, Beth, enjoyed or endured by generations.
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Right,depending…
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Maybe that’s the secret to living a good life to 100…being a fun loving person that brings joy to others. Chris
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I’m guessing you’re right
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Great story. But, um, karaoke is not my favorite pastime. Let’s just leave it it that.
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Done )
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Wow. What a great story. I’m always so interested in history. Thanks for sharing!
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My pleasure-
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My gratitude to him! I love karaoke!
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here’s to him, karaoke man!
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That’s so interesting – I hosted many a karaoke night at my pub,they were great for business!
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I’m sure people loved it
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Fascinating story, thank you!
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Thanks for sharing this idea and very funny guy. Anita
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yes, full of fun
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It is good that he is being recognized.
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I think so, too –
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He added fun to the world…can’t ask for more than that.
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what a wonderful thing to be known for
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so that’s how it all began; fascinating how one thing leads to another; he sure lived to a ripe old age; they say creativity, the inventive mind, keeps you young :)
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it really is how most things come about – he really embraced life
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and to you!
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Karaoke was a great idea. I wonder how many undiscovered talents started that way.
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a good question –
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Very interesting idea.
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he probably had no idea how big it would get
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Yes that I think is right.
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What great fun he invented – too bad he didn’t patent it. C’est la vie. I’ve had more than one fun evening singing along :)
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Same !
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Yes!
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One of the biggest and fun-est activities going these days, Beth!
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I’m sure he had no idea how fun it would get)
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He should have had a patent! Karaoke is something I never was brave enough to do!
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I think people just counted in the goodness o
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Goodness of mankind and probably didn’t know it would be so popular
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Getting to age 100 was a great reward.
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And then, he ran out of songs…
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We will have to keep singing them in his memory.
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yes, loud, and badly
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I can take the badly part!
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Good story, Beth!
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Thanks!
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