Category Archive for Visual Kei + Music
VISUAL KEI GROUP DELUHI ANNOUNCES HIATUS. TRICK MONSTER, CYBER RAVE HAIR & CLOTHING STORE IN SHINSAIBASHI, OSAKA.
First Vidoll, then D’espairsRay… and now Deluhi. Yet another Visual Kei band is taking a temporary break from musical activities. Beginning December 1st, the band will be taking a pause so that the individual members can increase their skills and “musical power of expression.” Until Deluhi reaches their goal, there will be no lives or new releases.
Anyone want to take a stab at why so many young Visual Kei bands are taking hiatuses? A reaction to poor management and/or demanding record companies? An excuse, to cover something up? Such as frazzled vocal cords, due to improper care and growling? Or maybe it’s a curse: as soon as La Carmina watches a Visual Kei group perform live, it breaks up. (I saw Deluhi a few months ago; here is my concert review.)
On a brighter note… quite literally! Yukiro and I went shopping in Shinsaibashi, the alternative fashion district of Osaka. One of our favorite stores was Trick Monster, purveyors of cyber rave clothing and neon hairstyles.
Customers could purchase striped, rainbow hair extensions and have them fitted right then and there.
Here are some of the very creative dye-jobs from the Trick Monster hair salon. Shaved patterns, colorful streaks, and a tomato-head!
Rave revival. The store sold lunch boxes and grotesque-cute monster dolls.
If a Troll doll were bitten by a zombie…
“I was working in the lab late one night, when my eyes beheld an eerie sight. For my monster from his slab began to rise, and suddenly to my surprise… He did the mash. He did the monster mash. It was a graveyard smash.”
Set your TIVOs… Basil Farrow will be on Discovery Channel / Animal Planet on October 16th and 17th (check your local listings for the exact time). It’s a repeat of the Fat Cats episode; I’ll be posting a clip of his appearance in the next few days. You can see more of my fat-faced Scottish Fold cat on his blog, Facebook (friend him!) and YouTube.
I hope you get a chuckle out of my new CNNGo article, Asia’s 10 quirkiest theme cruises. Sail ho with Dan Rather, has-been celebrities and cattle! All my CNN articles are listed here; I’ll be filing reports from Tokyo in the next month.
Joseph Mallozzi, executive producer and co-showrunner on the Stargate television franchise, interviewed me for his blog spotlight on “individuals that make Tokyo so damn interesting.” How did my friends and family respond to my decision not to pursue a career in law? What makes the Japanese fashion scene so unique? Is there anything I’d never eat? My Q&A responses are here and after the jump.
What do you think of the cyber rave shop and hairstyles? Anyone have a theory as to why many Visual Kei bands recently announced they’re taking breaks?
Japanese Word of the Day: Toshiyori = Old people
Song of the Day: Deluhi – Two Hurt
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X JAPAN CONCERT 2010 REVIEW & LIVE PHOTOS: NORTH AMERICAN TOUR, VANCOUVER. YOSHIKI, TOSHI, SUGIZO, HEATH, PATA, HIDE.
We are X Japan! When the Jrock legends announced their first North American tour, some naysayers raised their brows at Yoshiki’s ambitions. Did the Visual Kei musicians deliver in concert? Above and beyond and beyond. Fans walked away speechless, and as you can see in the photos — X Japan is in fine form and visibly having fun. (Thank you to the band’s management for the tickets and the photo pass.)
I couldn’t take photos of the opening band, Vampires Everywhere!, so here is Sugizo in motion. My friend Bo writes: “I approached the opener with some trepidation after hearing tales of their rather abrupt departure from the stage in Los Angeles (X Japan fans apparently threw objects and booed). However, I found them to be a whimsical romp through the world of Screamo and actually quite enjoyed their song, though it was a bit on the long side… Oh, I just found out that they actually performed multiple songs and they just all sounded the same. How awkward.
Vampires Everywhere! was an energetic maelstrom of sound that somehow managed to find monotony amidst chaos. Perhaps they were trying to produce the musical equivalent of being bitten by a real vampire: first things are frantic and intense, but very quickly you begin to feel nothing at all.”
Snark aside, I urge concertgoers to be respectful during the opening performance. The group was invited by X Japan, and while their sound may not be to everyone’s liking, I don’t think that ever warrants cat-calls or launched tomatoes…
Not long after, a chorus swirled and the stage illuminated in blue… and there he was, Yoshiki, standing above his drums. Toshi, Sugizo, Pata, Heath. They took their positions, held up their arms and hammered into Jade (a new song). From start to end, the audience was hysterical, screaming out their names and waving X-shaped glowsticks.
And then: Rusty Nail. Silent Jealousy. Drain. X Japan’s classic songs, resurrected and fired out of a cannon (like the flames on either side of the stage).
Yoshiki’s live drumming was on fire. His years of headbanging messed up his vertebrae, which is why he wears a neck brace (as he explains in an interview with Kirsty Evans).
X Japan, so famous for their range of sound, transitioned from speed metal to a sweeping violin interlude by Sugizo. It was one of my favorite moments of the show.
Yoshiki’s piano playing is more urgent and expressive than ever. He can’t help but throw in Visual Kei flourishes — sweeping back his long coat-tails and ending a tremulous run with a bang — and crumpling to the ground. (I was only allowed to take photos for the first three songs, so unfortunately this moment isn’t captured.)
Toshi has one of the fullest voices I’ve ever heard in concert. We all held our breaths when he sustained a note… and kept it ringing… and ringing…
Bassist Heath. Solid. Hard. Icy.
Rhythm guitarist Pata. Sweeping. Flowing. Harmonic.
In place of the departed Hide: lead guitarist Sugizo. Glam. Resonant.
Yoshiki speaks: “I signed his band a long time ago, Luna Sea. So I’ve known him, it’s almost twenty years we’ve been friends. We’re not really replacing Hide, Sugizo is like a sixth member of the band. Hide is still there.”
Kurenai. Born to be Free. I. V. “As pioneers of the genre, X Japan certainly puts on a great visual show. Musically, they stand alone at the top,” says Bo.
We are X! We are X! We are X!
Yoshiki spoke in English. About how they’ve been waiting a long f-ing time to be here in North America. How it’s a dream come true. How we made it happen.
The climax. The encore: the unmatchable Endless Rain. Yoshiki’s gentle chords… then nothing but the voices of the fans.
My friend Bo only recently started learning about Visual Kei, and has this to say: “Musically, the intensity behind every note was palpable even from my seat in the back of the theatre; instead of blasting the audience with a wall of noise, they took the audience on a real journey through the ups and downs of each powerful song. I didn’t understand the lyrics, but I didn’t have to; the music said everything. Yoshiki’s beautiful piano runs, Sugizo’s chilling violin, and the piercing tone of Toshi’s voice would repeatedly draw us in before the full band would take us on a wild ride. By the time the night was over, this neophyte was a convert, standing at my seat, my hands in the shape of an X above my head, singing along to a song I had never heard before in my life.”
The last song, The Art of Life. “We never replaced Hide,” said Yoshiki. “He’s still performing with us in our hearts.”
For many of us, this is the first time we’ve seen X Japan live. Did the band meet your expectations? Floor you? What were your favorite moments in the show?
Japanese Word of the Day: Hisshou = Victory
Song of the Day: X Japan = Endless Rain (in Vancouver, appropriately)