Sunday, January 20, 2019

Raise a Suilen... and friends

  Not so very metal-influenced, but I followed up on the last person to drum for Cyntia and this is what I found.
  The aforementioned drummer Natsume who did the Urban Night album and tour with Cyntia has and does drum multiple gigs. One that had been simmering and began taking off early in 2018 was first called “The Third” because they were the third band to appear live on the “BanG Dream” program on Bandori TV. BanG Dream is an anime series about young female bands. Each character is very detailed. The studio musicians who ended up singing and playing the music began to eventually be revealed because people wanted to see them. The Third live band was renamed “Raise a Suilen” which is to say “Raise a bamboo curtain” revealing who the human band members are.
The anime characters are way young, none older than high school sophomores and some in middle school. The live band is considerably older, and that’s good because their musical skill level is commensurate. (Yes, I know there are child prodigies. They’re notable, because they’re unusual. If all child music students were prodigies, none would be notable nor even called a prodigy.)
So they’re a live band, and they’re an anime series. I’m probably oversimplifying or misstating the sequence and relationship, but that’s basically it.


They are:
    •    Raychell (vocals and bass)
    •    Kohara Riko (guitar and vocals)
    •    Natsume (drums and vocals)
    •    Kurachi Reo (keyboard and vocals)
    •    Tsumugi Risa (DJ and vocals)

On to the music. It’s high energy rock. So far, there are only four songs I see out there from this group.
"Unstoppable" -
Raychelle sings it cool, there is also vocal participation from the others, and most are very, well, animated. About the 3:10 mark, keyboardist Reo throws a high kick in the middle of playing. Lightning-fast, her foot flies up above her head for less than a second. Wow. Can’t fault the enthusiasm.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReM4oBWpv7E

This is posted as "R.I.O.T" but sounds very similar.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxhCp3XEWtw

Here’s the second live performance of that. We get a look at the DJ handling the intro music and the more complex electronica and visuals. I think. Overall they did a “value-added” presentation compared to the first.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxhCp3XEWtw

“A Declaration of xxx” plus “Expose Burn Out!!!” - Not live but the only vid I see of these. About the first - it seems to be more or less a dating custom in Japan to begin dating after a “love from afar” period followed with a declaration/confession by the young man of having feelings for the young woman and then if she agrees to go out, zap they’re in a relationship. In a video about dating in Japan, a young Japanese woman told of what a surprise it was when a western guy simply invited her out, and she came to realize they didn’t have to go from zero to relationship in seconds flat, they could get to know each other first. She rather liked it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVZPU44Ap-M


A further observation about the group: Raychelle is relatively tall, 173 cm/5’8”, and Natsume is about the same, and everyone else is considerably smaller. So the more petite ones dress more like the young-girl anime characters while Raychelle and Natsume don’t even try because it would look silly. They get to be the adults I guess.

Some info pages. The first is a nicely detailed fan page. In all these, it is  somewhat difficult to distinguish between the live band members and the characters that correspond in the anime series. In general, I’m thinking the quirkier the description, the more likely it is to be the anime personality.  If I’m reading it correctly, this page says the live performance songs except “This is the Way We Roll” were their originals.
https://iviachupichu.home.blog/raise-a-suilen-overview/

http://bandori.wikia.com/wiki/RAISE_A_SUILEN

https://www.reddit.com/r/BanGDream/comments/a3zjin/raise_a_suilen_characters_revealed_manga_revealed/


  These days Natsume also drums, and Raychelle does backing vocals, in Shazna, a “visual kei” band originally formed in Osaka in 1993 and currently in its third incarnation with three of its original members. “Visual kei” is the often-androgynous Japanese style glam rock, which can encompass any of several genres of music. I may expand on them in future following this series, because they’re not an all-woman band which is what I’m doing right now.

Two other bands of note in the BanG Dream franchise, which are all female: Roselia and Poppin’Party. Like Raise a Suilen, they are both real live bands and anime cartoons. Briefly -

A fan magazine page covering Roselia, whose outfits seem to be flamenco-inspired. With video links. Just addressing the live performance vids, “Re:birth day” is nicely done rock/pop. “Netsuiro Starmine” is more intense, inventive and driving... Liked.  “Louder” also; lead singer pushed her expression to the edge on this, deliberately (IMHO) going for a kind of desperate outpouring, which is not a bad thing. Many singers play it safe. She didn’t. My respect.
  Band characters’ popularity poll is listed near the bottom of the page. Two tied for first, though all were really close. Japanese diplomacy? The list is useful for names anyway.
https://j-mag.org/en/2018/03/01/bang-dream_survey-3/

Poppin’ Party, nickname Popipa: They actually perform the theme song for the TV anime “BanG Dream” series, linked in the page here. Over-the-top cutesy. They seem to be going for the anime character very-young-girl persona. I haven’t looked up the individuals, though most of these bands have members who are twentysomething. Similar to the Roselia article, popularity poll gives us the names.
https://j-mag.org/en/2018/02/20/bang-dream_survey/

There are other anime bands in the franchise, but those are the ones I know that have a live-band presence.
  The Wikipedia article on the BanG Dream! world.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BanG_Dream!


J

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Cyntia (Artemis)

Cyntia with no “h” - when searching, you can expect to have to click links saying “Search only for ‘Cyntia’?” Otherwise you get everything but them. But well worth the search.
Cyntia is a phonetic form of an English pronunciation of the name Cynthia, which is supposed to be another name for the goddess Artemis.
 They spend more time doing PowerPop/Rock oriented stuff rather than metal oriented compared to the majority of others in this series. Fun though. Variety I like. Good roadtrip music. And how cool is it for your lead singer to be named Saki?
Saki has a mostly natural sounding vocal style, comfortable to hear. When she lets loose the volume, it almost always sounds effortless. It soars. 
And - she has the ability to use a bit of vibrato without overdoing it. That is vital to listenability for me. I can handle none or a little. Overdo and I feel like running for the exit. Saki wins.
And the band is great, top-level musicianship, with its own mix of traditional rock and metal (plus the aforementioned PowerPop), sometimes traditional Japanese elements, and occasional other touches pulled from the middle east, from jazz... Their quality seems to be more the norm than not of the Japanese rock/metal groups who make it onto YouTube, really. Some examples -

Endless World - Playing a smaller club, Saki very casual in T-shirt and shorts, doing a cute childlike chorus, yet with solid strong instrumental work...

More dressed up and rocking a bit harder at Blaze, a bigger venue with flashing lights, et cetera:

At Blaze, Part 2 - more intense, more metal elements included now and then:

One of their more metallic rockers, “Through the Fire and Desire”
Another reminder of how much fun Japanese groups have with the stronger rock and metal tunes. I gotta learn more of the language...

“Ride on Time” - I mentioned rockin’ road music, right? Or dancing, whatever.

GeAr - Kickin’ hard rock and Saki leading “the wave” all in one song... I like.

A rock anthem of sorts, originally released in 2013 - and, Ayano gets mobile with an Edgar Winter style keyboard-with-strap -
Return to Myself ~ Shinai, Shinai, Natsu

Green Eyed Monster


Saki – Vocals
Yui – Guitars, Chorus
Ayano – Keyboards, Piano, Chorus 
Azu - Bass, Chorus 
Natsume – Drums, Percussion, Chorus (Support)

  Their music runs from heavy rock to well, pretty much pop. Being one of the few bands I’m reviewing in this series who is signed to a major recording label is  probably an influence. 
In 2015, previous drummer Kanoko Matsukawa left following the widely disrespected “Woman” album (many considered it fluff). She had co-founded the group in 2011 with lead guitarist Yui.
They apparently realized how far astray they had gone and came back with a stronger sound on “Urban Night” in late 2016, followed by the “Urban Night” promo tour going into 2017 . It looks like Natsume played “support” drums for them but isn’t officially a member? The band website has a picture of the other four as the main banner and that’s it.
They are said to be on hiatus as of January 2018. Reason given was Yui had a health problem.
Since Natsume’s main gig with Raise a Suilen took off and she became less available about then, that MIGHT have been a factor too.
I would really like to see (and hear) Cyntia regroup and continue.
Cyntia Urban Nights promo pic, less Natsume


Their site

Their Encyclopedia Metallium page, doesn’t mention Natsume

Same site, page on Kanoko

The Wiki schtick. Ignores the work of Natsume.


Natsume’s blog. Not terribly current, but it is showing her playing for Cyntia through December 17, 2017, under the “Schedule” tab (also the “Media” tab shows the cover of the Cyntia “Urban Night” DVD among other things). Then I see names like Raychelle, The Third, Shazna going as far as April 2018. I see references  on her Facebook etc. to “Raise a Suilen”. A short review of that group will be following soonly.

Natsume’s Instagram

And her Facebook photos, including concert posters, show her with Cyntia. So this is the correct Natsume.

Drumming demo with disassembly and reassembly of a snare drum. Explaining it in Japanese of course.


Okay. Done. Will pick up with “Raise a Suilen” next, because of the Natsume connection.







 

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Bridear

Playing Graz, Austria, 2018-11-27
One of Bridear’s early publicity photos carried the text, “Gal Metal Band from Fukuoka” which I think was pretty much to the point.
  The instrumentals are strong. IMHO, Kimi sounds more garage-punk than metal, usually. When they have another singer (Misa until her exit) doing metal “death growl” lines back and forth with her, THEN it sounds more metal. Just my opinion. Can’t do that every song though because it’s hard on the throat.
They do several numbers with guitars playing identical notes, plus a few harmonizing as well, then back. Kinda neat.
  “Skew Lines” (2016) was one of their densest metal offerings. Lately, trying for a more “commercial” approach, “Dear Bride” (album “Helix” 2018) sounds more PowerPop. There’s a lot in between.
     They were formed in 2011 and have had only one change in the members. Their 2013 album “Overturn the Doom” had a cover scene that is darkish on the viewer’s side, but a door is partway open with a bright light shining from beyond... and several of their songs include the idea of light overcoming darkness, which illustrates my impression that Japanese female metal bands tend to be heavy-duty with their instruments and at the same time, more positive in spirit and message than many western death-metal bands. They clearly plan on winning and living.

Lead guitarist Misa departed in 2017, citing different goals (she was not feeling the new pop-ish direction as I understand), and early in 2018 they gained Misaki. Since then they recorded the album “Helix”.
https://visualioner.com/2018/03/30/misaki-has-joined-bridear-new-look/

Official website, which has a button for which language to use:
https://bridear.jp/

YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqkHezzlbqWrmOhoTcZTVjg

https://twitter.com/Bridear_info

https://mobile.twitter.com/Bridear_info

And this is Misaki’s page -
https://twitter.com/black_rainyday

Metal Archives page:
https://www.metal-archives.com/bands/Bridear/3540368187

And
https://www.last.fm/music/Bridear

Former guitarist Misa:
https://www.metal-archives.com/artists/Misa/515792

https://www.jrocknews.com/2017/09/bridears-misa-depart-european-tour.html

A review of the 2018 “Helix” album. A dude is doing the growls on G-A-M-E? Sigh. Can anyone confirm/deny?
https://www.metal-archives.com/reviews/Bridear/Helix/703055/Liquid_Braino/198103

A live version of G-A-M-E, which definitely has Kimi doing the growls.
           https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiFZ_JWKVwE

Group member profiles:
https://bridear.jp/profile/

Yoshitsuru is leaving at 2018 year end:
https://bridear.jp/news/美弦%E3%80%80脱退のご報告/