The King of City Pop doesn't want his crown.Tatsuro Yamashita doesn't have a Spotify account. He doesn't have a TikTok. He spends his time instructing lawyers to issue takedown notices against the very YouTube videos that made him a global icon to a generation that wasn't even born when his hits were recorded.The Architecture of City Pop is the definitive look at how that happened.The book traces Yamashita's journey from a lonely childhood in postwar Ikebukuro-teaching himself harmony via Far East Network radio-through the commercial disaster of Sugar Babe and into the breakthrough sessions that produced For You and "Sparkle."Inside, you'll discover: The Technical Craft: Why engineers physically spliced magnetic tape with razor blades to fix a single note.The Gear: The sonic difference between the warm chorus of a Roland Juno-60 and the brittle glass of a DX7.The Process: What happens when you layer a single voice 32 times on analog equipment, battling the accumulation of tape hiss.The Legend: His marriage to Mariya Takeuchi, his decades hosting Sunday Songbook, and his refusal to accept the "King of City Pop" title.Yamashita calls himself a shokunin-a craftsman. He just wants the snare to hit right. The internet crowned him anyway; he's been trying to give the crown back ever since.