Anzen Chitai
Anzen Chitai | |
---|---|
Origin | Asahikawa, HokkaidÅ, Japan |
Genres | Rock |
Years active | 1973–1988, 1990–1992, 2002–2003, 2009–present |
Labels | Sony Music Entertainment Japan, Kitty Records, Universal Music Group |
Associated acts | YÅsui Inoue |
Website | www.anzenchitai.jp |
Members |
Koji Tamaki Yutaka Takezawa Wataru Yahagi Haruyoshi Rokudo Yuji Tanaka |
Past members |
Toshiya Takezawa Takahiro Miyashita Kazuyoshi Tamaki Ichiji Ohira |
Anzen Chitai (安全地帯, literally "Safety Zone") is a Japanese rock band, formed in 1973 by five musicians in Asahikawa, HokkaidÅ, Japan. It debuted in 1982 in Tokyo, Japan. They became one of Japan's most successful rock bands in the 1980s.[1][2]
Members
- Koji Tamaki (玉置浩二 Tamaki KÅji) - Vocals, Guitars & Percussion (1973–present)
- Yutaka Takezawa (æ¦æ²¢è±Š Takezawa Yutaka) - Guitars (1973–present)
- Wataru Yahagi (矢è©æ¸‰ Yahagi Wataru) - Guitars (1977–present)
- Haruyoshi Rokudo (å…åœŸé–‹æ£ RokudÅ Haruyoshi) Bass, Piano & Keyboards (1977–present)
- Yuji Tanaka (ç”°ä¸è£•äºŒ Tanaka YÅ«ji) - Drums (1977–1978, 1982–present)
Past members
- Toshiya Takezawa (æ¦æ²¢ä¿Šä¹Ÿ Takezawa Toshiya) - Guitars, Keyboards (1973–1981)
- Takahiro Miyashita (å®®ä¸‹éš†å® Miyashita Takahiro) - Bass (1973–1978)
- Kazuyoshi Tamaki (玉置一芳 Tamaki Kazuyoshi) - Drums (1973–1977)
- Ichiji Ohira (大平市治 Ōhira Ichiji) - Drums (1977–1982)
History
1970s: Beginnings
Formed in 1973 as the high-school garage band Invader in Asahikawa, HokkaidÅ, its original members included vocalist Koji Tamaki, guitarist Yutaka Takezawa and guitarist/keyboardist Toshiya Takezawa, who is also Yutaka's brother. Later, in late 1973, Koji's brother and drummer, Kazuyoshi Tamaki and bassist Takahiro Miyashita joined. In 1977, the band changed its name to Anzen Chitai ("Safety Zone"), and Kazuyoshi Tamaki left the group to be replaced by Ichiji Ohira. By December 1977, Anzen Chitai merged with another band, the Haruyoshi Rokudo Band (å…土開æ£ãƒãƒ³ãƒ‰ RokudÅ Haruyoshi Bando), and added three more members: bassist Haruyoshi Rokudo, guitarist Wataru Yahagi, and drummer Yuji Tanaka. By this point, they had expanded to an eight-member group. Within the next three years, Toshiya Takezawa and Takahiro Miyashita left. Yuji Tanaka also left at this point.
1980s: Commercial success
In 1981, they began work as a backup band for singer-songwriter YÅsui Inoue, and released their debut single, "Moegi Iro no Snap" (è 黄色ã®ã‚¹ãƒŠãƒƒãƒ— Moegi Iro no Sunappu) under the Kitty Records in February 1982. However, the final personnel change occurred as Ichiji Ohira left, and Yuji Tanaka returned in his place, establishing the current lineup.
Under the guidance of their producer and co-arranger Masaru Hoshi (星 å‹ Hoshi Masaru), lead guitarist and vocalist of the psychedelic rock group The Mops, the band continued to refine their craft in the studio. Their status as a backup band soon changed: in 1984, "Wine Red no Kokoro" (ワインレッドã®å¿ƒ Wain Reddo No Kokoro, lit. Wine Red Heart) reached No. 1 on the Oricon charts, to be followed by among others, "Kanashimi ni Sayonara" (悲ã—ã¿ã«ã•ã‚ˆãªã‚‰) and "Suki Sa" (好ãã•) (featured on the popular Rumiko Takahashi anime series Maison Ikkoku). "Wine Red no Kokoro" was composed by Koji Tamaki with lyrics by YÅsui Inoue. Koji Tamaki was credited as the sole composer in virtually all of Anzen Chitai's music, with GorÅ Matsui being the lyricist frequently. Their popularity in the 1980s culminated in a five-day soldout concert tour at the Nippon Budokan in 1987, which had a total attendance of 60,000.
1990s and 2000s: Frequent hiatuses
Despite a couple of hiatuses for the sake of solo careers (July 1988-March 1990, 1993–2001), Anzen Chitai continued to record and tour. A new studio album was released in October 2003, titled Anzen Chitai X (their tenth studio album). After their Japanese concert tour in support of the "Anzen Chitai X" album, the band announced at the end of 2003 that they are taking yet another indefinite hiatus.
As of 2006, Koji Tamaki remains active as a solo performer and television actor, with Wataru Yahagi performing in both his solo albums and concerts. Yutaka Takezawa is also active in the music business as a composer, producer, arranger and session guitarist.
On April 28, 2008, fan club members were notified that Tamaki has announced his retirement from music, as well as the closing of the official Koji Tamaki & Anzenchitai fan club, Star. Illness that requires long-term treatment was cited for his decision.
During the second half of 2009, the band held secret meetings and decided to regroup. Similar to their amateur days, band members lodged together to practise and compose music.
2010–present: Returning from hiatus
On January 8, 2010, the band announced the resumption of their career along with making appearance on the television program Tokudane!. Switching back to Universal Music Japan (which has absorbed their former label Kitty Records and is the distributor of their pre-Sony Music Japan catalog) as their record label, a music video for their new single "Aoi Bara" was released.
Their double A-side single "Aoi Bara/Wine Red no Kokoro (2010 version)" was released on March 3, 2010. Tamaki wrote the lyrics and music of "Aoi Bara." The single debuted at #9 on Oricon weekly charts, becoming their first Top 10 single in 21 years 6 months since their single "Hohoemi ni Kanpai" in 1988.[3]
On May 26, 2010, Anzen Chitai released their first album in nearly 7 years, Anzenchitai 11 Starts "Mata ne. . .". Alongside this new album, they released Anzen Chitai Hits on June 30, 2010. This album encapsulated the rerecorded versions of their singles throughout the 1980s.
Discography
Singles
Title | Japanese | Date |
---|---|---|
Moegi'iro no Snap | è 黄色ã®ã‚¹ãƒŠãƒƒãƒ— | 25/02/1982 |
On My Way | オン・マイ・ウェイ | 25/10/1982 |
Las Vegas Typhoon | ラスベガス・タイフーン | 01/04/1983 |
Wine Red no Kokoro | ワインレッドã®å¿ƒ | 25/11/1983 |
Mayonaka Sugi no Koi | 真夜ä¸ã™ãŽã®æ‹ | 16/04/1984 |
Masquerade | マスカレード | 25/07/1984 |
Koi no Yokan | æ‹ã®äºˆæ„Ÿ | 25/10/1984 |
Netsu Shisen | 熱視線 | 25/01/1985 |
Kanashimi ni Sayonara | 悲ã—ã¿ã«ã•ã‚ˆãªã‚‰ | 25/06/1985 |
Aoi Hitomi no Eris | 碧ã„çž³ã®ã‚¨ãƒªã‚¹ | 01/10/1985 |
Prussian Blue no Shouzou | プルシアンブルーã®è‚–åƒ | 01/07/1986 |
Natsu no Owari no Harmony (w/ Inoue Yosui) | å¤ã®çµ‚ã‚Šã®ãƒãƒ¼ãƒ¢ãƒ‹ãƒ¼ | 25/09/1986 |
Friend | 21/10/1986 | |
Suki sa | 好ãã• | 03/12/1986 |
Jirettai | ã˜ã‚Œã£ãŸã„ | 21/04/1987 |
Juliet | 02/12/1987 | |
Tsuki ni Nureta Futari | 月ã«æ¿¡ã‚ŒãŸãµãŸã‚Š | 10/03/1988 |
I Love You Kara Hajimeyou | I Love You ã‹ã‚‰ã¯ã˜ã‚よㆠ| 21/06/1988 |
Hohoemi ni Kanpai | 微笑ã¿ã«ä¹¾æ¯ | 25/08/1988 |
Jounetsu | 情熱 | 07/11/1990 |
Itsumo Kimi no Soba ni | ã„ã¤ã‚‚å›ã®ãã°ã« | 06/11/1991 |
Ano Koro e | ã‚ã®é ƒã¸ | 02/12/1992 |
Hitoribocchi no Yell | ã²ã¨ã‚Šã¼ã£ã¡ã®ã‚¨ãƒ¼ãƒ« | 10/02/1993 |
Deai | 出逢ㄠ| 10/07/2002 |
Hansei / Ano Koro e | åçœ / ã‚ã®é ƒã¸ | 04/12/2002 |
Ame Nochi Hare / Chocolate | 雨ã®ã¡æ™´ã‚Œ / ショコラ | 18/09/2003 |
Aoi Bara / Wine Red no Kokoro (2010 Version) | è’¼ã„ãƒãƒ© / ワインレッドã®å¿ƒ (2010ヴァージョン) | 03/03/2010 |
Orange / Koi no Yokan (2010 Version) | オレンジ / æ‹ã®äºˆæ„Ÿ (2010ヴァージョン) | 05/05/2010 |
Kekkai / Denen | çµç•Œ / 田園 | 24/08/2011 |
Albums
Title | Japanese | Date |
---|---|---|
Anzen Chitai I Remember to Remember | 安全地帯 I Remember to Remember | 25/01/1983 |
Anzen Chitai II | 安全地帯 II | 01/05/1984 |
Anzen Chitai III ~Dakishimetai | 安全地帯 III 〜抱ãã—ã‚ãŸã„ | 01/12/1984 |
Anzen Chitai IV | 安全地帯 IV | 24/11/1985 |
Anzen Chitai V | 安全地帯 V | 14/12/1986 |
Anzen Chitai VI ~Tsuki ni Nureta Futari | 安全地帯 VI 〜月ã«æ¿¡ã‚ŒãŸãµãŸã‚Š | 10/04/1988 |
Anzen Chitai VII ~Yume no Miyako | 安全地帯 VII 〜夢ã®éƒ½ | 25/07/1990 |
Anzen Chitai VIII ~Taiyou | 安全地帯 VIII 〜太陽 | 11/12/1991 |
Anzen Chitai IX | 安全地帯 IX | 07/08/2002 |
Anzen Chitai X ~Ame Nochi Hare~ | 安全地帯 X 〜雨ã®ã¡æ™´ã‚Œã€œ | 22/10/2003 |
Anzen Chitai XI ☆STARTS☆ "Mata ne...." | 安全地帯 XI ☆STARTS☆「ã¾ãŸã…。〠| 26/05/2010 |
Anzen Chitai XII | 安全地帯 XII | 14/09/2011 |
Anzen Chitai XIII Junk | 安全地帯 XIII Junk | 16/11/2011 |
Anzen Chitai XIV -The Saltmoderate Show- | 安全地帯 XIV The Saltmoderate Show | 06/03/2013 |
References
- ↑ "Top 100 Japanese pops Artists - No.47" (in Japanese). HMV Japan. 2003-10-15. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
- ↑ Mark Schilling The Encyclopedia of Japanese pop culture 1997 0834803801 p.230 "In the latter half of the 1980s rock bands like Rebecca, Checkers, Hound Dog, Tube, Anzen Chitai, Bakufu Slump, and Kome Kome Club began to take center stage on the pop scene. Unlike earlier bands, who played Western-style rock for hard-core fans, these groups had a more Japanized sound that ordinary kids could relate to. Also, taking a hint from New Music queen YUMINC, who mounted spectacular stage shows.."
- ↑ "7å¹´ã¶ã‚Šæ´»å‹•å†é–‹ã®å®‰å…¨åœ°å¸¯ã€21å¹´åŠã¶ã‚Šã®TOP10入りã§ãƒ©ãƒƒãƒ„&スター以æ¥ã®æ´ä»£è¨˜éŒ²" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2010-03-09. Archived from the original on 14 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-09.
External links
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