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INTERVIEW | How Japanese musician Grover turned his passion of ‘sound’ into a health-tech startup

Meet Fillgoo: an app that tracks how music changes your mood and body

Toshi Maeda by Toshi Maeda
05/02/2025
in Arts & Music, HealthTech, Life Sciences, Lifestyle, News, Wellbeing
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JStories ー For over two decades, Yoshikazu Grover — better known simply as Grover — has been a familiar voice and face in Japan’s media industry. As a musician and radio personality, his career has been all about the power of sound.

Musician and radio personality Yoshikazu Grover speaks to JStories as he prepares to showcase his health-tech app at Tokyo’s Sushi Tech startup event, which will start on May 8.        Photo by Emi Takahata | JStories

Now, Grover is taking on a new role: tech entrepreneur.

He’s channeling his lifelong love of music into Fillgoo, a new health-tech app designed to measure how listening to music affects your mood and nervous system.

Can music really heal? Grover believes it can

Grover has long felt that music does more than entertain — it can heal.

He kept wondering: What if technology could actually measure the positive feelings people experience after listening to certain songs?  Could this data be used to help people choose music that lifts their mood or helps them relax?

Over the past few years, he has developed Fillgoo (a playful take on “Feel Good”). The app uses a smartphone’s camera to detect changes in the user’s autonomic nervous system — specifically by measuring blood flow and pulse — before and after listening to a song.

The app’s prototype is already available for iOS users. Eventually, Grover hopes users will be able to share their data and even see song rankings based on how much they improve listeners’ moods or relaxation levels.

The app’s prototype is now available for iOS users.       
The app assesses changes in users’ moods before and after listening to music by measuring variations in blood flow and pulse.   
Grover (left), host of the radio program Jam the Planet on J-WAVE (81.3FM), alongside the author (right), appearing as a news commentator in his capacity as JStories executive editor.     Photo by JStories

From artist to entrepreneur: What inspired the leap?

Grover traces his entrepreneurial journey back to a powerful experience a decade ago.

In 2014, he watched Alive Inside, a U.S. documentary showing how music therapy helped dementia patients rediscover memories and reconnect with loved ones.

“I saw people who seemed unresponsive or unable to communicate suddenly light up when they heard songs from their youth,” Grover recalls. “They would start smiling, hugging, even dancing. I was deeply moved by the sheer power of music to awaken the mind.”

Grover says he was deeply moved by the power of music to awaken the mind and body after watching the 2014 US documentary Alive Inside.     Photo by Emi Takahata | JStories 

The COVID-19 pandemic also reinforced Grover’s desire to build something new. As many in the entertainment industry faced uncertain futures, he reflected on how he could support his family — especially his two young daughters — if he could no longer rely on music or radio work.

A family affair: brothers in business, parents as inspiration

Though Grover considers music his lifelong “best friend,” when it came to starting a company, he turned to another trusted companion: his older brother, Kaz.

Kaz, a seasoned finance professional based in the U.S., agreed to co-found Fillgoo. He now serves as the company’s CEO, while Grover focuses on marketing and promotion as chief marketing officer.

“Business was never my strong suit,” Grover laughs. “But when my brother said he saw real potential and offered to take this journey together, I thought — if he’s leading the way, I’m in.”

A childhood photo of Yoshikazu Grover (right) sitting beside his older brother Kaz (left), who is four years his senior.    Source: Fillgoo website

Family has always been central to Grover’s story. His Japanese mother, a classical violinist, once asked him to change the music in the car from classical to Latin because it reminded her too much of a strict childhood teacher. That moment reinforced for Grover how powerfully music triggers personal memories.

He also remembers advice from his late father, an Indian who studied in Japan, who often told him, “Be happy, always.”

That simple message inspired Grover to embrace what his father called “Happy Therapy”—a philosophy now embedded into Fillgoo’s mission.

What’s next for Fillgoo? Big dreams, starting in Tokyo

Fillgoo remains in its early stages. The app is still a prototype, and the team is actively developing its business model and seeking partners.

One ambitious goal: helping Japan, a rapidly aging society, build a music-based wellness ecosystem. By promoting health through music, they hope to reduce healthcare costs — and perhaps even create a new revenue stream for songwriters and musicians.

Grover’s team is also exploring collaborations with wearable tech companies. While the current app uses a smartphone camera for measurements, future versions may gather data through smartwatches or rings.

The author (left) and Grover (right) discuss Fillgoo’s vision of a music-based wellness ecosystem to support healthy aging in Japan.    Photo by Emi Takahata | JStories

This month, Grover will showcase Fillgoo at SusHi Tech Tokyo 2025, one of Japan’s biggest global startup events. He’ll personally introduce the app to visitors from around the world.

“It’s thrilling — and a bit nerve-wracking,” Grover says. “But I can’t wait to meet people, hear their reactions, and see how Fillgoo might help them in their own lives.”

Written by Toshi Maeda

Edited by Desiderio Luna

Top video: Giulia Righi (JStories)

For inquiries regarding this article, please contact jstories@pacificbridge.jp


Tags: #StartupAging SocietyDigital HealthFillgooHealthTechInnovationInterviewJapanMental WellbeingMusicMusic Therapy
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Toshi Maeda

Toshi Maeda

A multilingual journalist with over 25 years of experience in the media industry, Maeda worked as a producer and correspondent for Reuters TV in Tokyo after stints as a reporter at The Japan Times, The Associated Press in San Francisco, Newsday in New York, and The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, California. Maeda has also taught journalism at Komazawa University’s Faculty of Global Media Studies. Currently, he serves as executive editor for solutions-focused bilingual news platform J-Stories, a PBMC media outlet.

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