Tang Dynasty (band)

Tang Dynasty

Tang Dynasty performing in 2004.
Background information
Origin Beijing, China
Genres Progressive rock, art rock, folk metal, heavy metal
Years active 1988–present
Labels China Fire-Magic Stone-Rock Records (1992-1997), Jingwen Records (1998-2001), Jingguan Records (present)
Associated acts Budaoweng, Black Panther, Breathing, White Angel, The Micro-organists, Spring and Autumn
Members Ding Wu
Zhao Nian
Gu Zhong
Chen Lei
Past members Andrew Szabo
Zhang Ju (deceased)
Kaiser Kuo
Yu Yang
Liu Yijun

Tang Dynasty (Chinese: 唐朝乐队; pinyin: Tángcháo yuèduì) is a Chinese rock/metal band formed in 1988. They are often credited as being the first heavy metal band in China.

Biography

Tang Dynasty rose to fame with their first major album A Dream Return to Tang Dynasty (1991/2). The album officially sold about 2,000,000 authentic copies throughout Asia and abroad, not counting the multitudes more of infringing copies. Their sound is part progressive rock and artistic metal and part traditional Chinese vocal technique. The lyrical poetry and musical arrangements meant to hearken back to the glorious days of ancient Chinese civilization; in particular, the art and cultural epitome of Chinese history as popularly represented by the era of the Tang dynasty.

In 1991, the band released its metal/rock version of The Internationale in Chinese.

Bassist Zhang Ju, died on May 11, 1995 when his motorcycle collided with a truck on the Zizhuqiao freeway overpass in western Beijing. Gu Zhong became bass player, but in August Liu Yijun left the band. Original founding member Kaiser Kuo, a Chinese-American who formed the band with Ding Wu and Zhang Ju in 1988, rejoined as guitarist in August 1996.

The band's 1998 release Epic was their second album, seven years after their debut record.

Kuo again parted company with Tang Dynasty in June 1999 and later formed another well-recognized metal/rock band, Spring and Autumn (Chunqiu).[1] Kuo was replaced by former Iron Kite frontman Yu Yang, and then by young guitar virtuoso Chen Lei in late 2000. After some more member changes, Lao Wu rejoined the group in 2002.

Tang Dynasty released their third album Romantic Knight ("Langman Qishi") in mid-2008, featuring "Feng Shan Ji" as the album's lead track.[2] Tang Dynasty appear in the Western documentary by Sam Dunn, Global Metal, released that same year.[3]

In January 2009, Lao Wu announced his second departure of the band due to "personal reasons"; he is now working with an Austrian neo-classical rock artist on an album stated to be out by 2010. Vocalist Ding is currently filling the spot of the second guitarist.[4] In February 2010, Ding Wu announced that the band was preparing for the fourth release that due out later in the year.[5]

Members

Former members

Discography

Studio albums

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.