Blood Stain Child
Blood Stain Child | |
---|---|
Also known as | Visionquest |
Origin | Osaka, Japan |
Genres | Melodic death metal, alternative metal, industrial metal, trance |
Years active | 2000–present |
Labels | Pony Canyon, Coroner (EU), Dope Entertainment (KR), Metal Blade |
Website | www.bloodstainchild.com |
Members |
Ryo Ryu Aki G.S.R Gami Kiki |
Past members |
Masato Daiki Shiromasa Sadew Violator Sophia Makoto |
Blood Stain Child (stylised as BLOOD STAIN CHILD) is a Japanese metal band from the city of Osaka. The band's musical style combines modern melodic death metal with electro-industrial and trance.[1] The band formed under the name "Visionquest" in 1999, but reformed under the name Blood Stain Child in 2000.[2]
Background
Blood Stain Child was formed in 2000 by Ryo (vocals, bass), Ryu (guitar), Daiki (guitar), Aki (keyboards) and Violator (drums).[3] In August 2000, Blood Stain Child recorded their first demo, which consisted of the songs "Silence of Northern Hell", "Requiem", and "Legend of Dark". The band sent that demo to a radio station and the DJ enjoyed the music so much that he recommended the band to the record label, M&I Company, who eventually signed Blood Stain Child.[3]
In 2001, Blood Stain Child recorded two songs, "The World" and "Steel Flame". The first song was used as the theme song for professional wrestler, Kensuke Sasaki and the second song was used as the theme song for the 30th anniversary of New Japan Pro Wrestling, a professional wrestling group.[2] In July 2002, Blood Stain released their debut studio album, Silence of Northern Hell. In October 2002, Blood Stain Child was the supporting act for Dream Evil during their tour in Japan. In June 2003, Blood Stain Child released their second studio album, Mystic Your Heart, which was co-produced by Anssi Kippo, a popular producer from Finland.
In March 2005, Daiki left the band and was replaced by Shiromasa in April. That same year, Blood Stain Child released their third studio album, Idolator, which was co-produced by Tue Madsen, a popular producer from Denmark. In 2006, Blood Stain Child signed with Dockyard 1 and released Idolator in Europe on November 27, 2006. Idolator was later released in the United States through Locomotive Records on July 17, 2007.
In April 2007, Blood Stain Child announced the addition of a new vocalist, Sadew, and a new guitarist, G.S.R. On July 18, 2007, Blood Stain Child released their fourth studio album, Mozaiq in Japan, which was also co-produced by Tue Madsen. It was then released in Europe on July 20, 2007 with an exclusive bonus track "Cosmic Highway".
On June 12, 2010, Ryu announced on his official blog that Sadew withdrew from the band due to personal reasons. Drummer Violator left the band as well, in order to take care of family business. In September the band announced new members Sophia (from Greece) on vocals and Gami (ex.Youthquake) on drums, signing a contract with Italian record label Coroner Records and Japanese record label Pony Canyon.
In April 2011, Blood Stain Child took part in a Studio Ghibli cover album titled Imaginary Flying Machines - Princess Ghibli, covering the songs "Itsumo Nando Demo" (Spirited Away) and "Teru no Uta" (Tales from Earthsea). On June 2011, the band performed at A-Kon in Dallas, Texas, together with D.[4] Later that same month, the band released their 5th full studio album, Epsilon. The band started a Japanese tour from August 19 to September 24.[5] In December 2011, the band performed in Moscow, St.Petersburg, Ekaterinburg and Kiev.
Blood Stain Child performed as special guests at Naka-Kon 2012, in Overland Park, Kansas, between the 10–12 February. In March 2012, the band took part in another Princess Ghibli album, covering the song "Ai wa Hana Kimi wa Sonotane" (Only Yesterday). On July 21, Sophia officially announced that she was leaving Blood Stain Child.[6] New female vocalist Kiki joined the band on December 3. In early 2013 the band introduced their new VJ/DJ - Makoto, which came along with an announcement of Aki being absent from further live shows due to "his personal issues", however, he will remain a member and take part in the creation of music.
Musical style
A notable feature of Blood Stain Child is their tendency to incorporate both electro-industrial and euro-trance related themes and elements into their music. The band's sound includes screamed vocals complemented at times by traditional singing, with their overall musical style best classified as a mix between In Flames, Children of Bodom, and Soilwork.[2][7] The band cites influences such as In Flames, Dark Tranquillity, HIM, X Japan, and Luna Sea.
Members
- Ryo – bass, vocals (1999, 2000–present)
- Ryu – lead guitar, synth guitar (1999, 2000–present)
- Aki – keyboards, synthesizers, programming, backing vocals (2000–2013, studio member from 2013–present)
- G.S.R – rhythm guitar, synth guitar (2007–present)
- Gami – drums, percussion (2010–present)
- Kiki – vocals (2012–present)
Former members
- Daiki – rhythm guitar, synth guitar (2000–2005)
- Shiromasa – rhythm guitar, synth guitar (2005–2007)
- Sadew – vocals (2007–2010)
- Violator – drums, percussion (1999, 2000–2010)
- Sophia – vocals (2010–2012)
- Makoto - VJ/DJ (2013–2014)
Timeline
Discography
- Demos and EPs
- Demo 2000 (2000)
- The World (2001)
- Last Stardust (EP)(2014)
- Albums
- Silence of Northern Hell (2002)
- Mystic Your Heart (2003)
- Idolator (2005)
- Mozaiq (2007)
- Epsilon (2011)
- Music videos
- "Silence of Northern Hell" from Silence of Northern Hell
- "Truth" from Idolator
- "Freedom" from Mozaiq
- "Last Stardust" from the promotional single with the same name.
References
- ↑ http://www.myspace.com/bloodstainchildmusic
- 1 2 3 Begai, Carl. "Blood Stain Child: Bio". Dockyard 1. Retrieved 2007-05-29.
- 1 2 Parnis, Eric (2006). "Blood Stain Child Q&A". PBS 106.7 FM. Archived from the original on 2007-08-31. Retrieved 2007-05-29.
- ↑ http://www.a-kon.com/bm/at-the-kon/guests/blood-stain-child.shtml
- ↑
- ↑ http://ameblo.jp/sakurasomnium/entry-11307915955.html Sophia's goodbye message
- ↑ Begai, Carl. "Blood Stain Child". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. Retrieved 2007-05-29.
External links
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