The Roosters
The Roosters (ザ・ルースターズ Za Rūsutāzu) were a Japanese rock band that mixed punk, blues-rock, ska and straight-forward rock and roll. They were active throughout the 1980s and released 10 albums of original material and one live album. They formed in 1979 and disbanded nine years and 11 albums later after numerous lineup changes.
HistoryThey formed in 1979 in the Hakata ward of Fukuoka prefecture's capital city of Fukuoka. Although there were four different lineups throughout the life of the band--all centered around guitarist Hanada Hiroyuki--Ohe Shinya was the band's first frontman. Shinya not only sang lead vocals, but also dominated the writing of lyrics and music for the group for the first three albums. In addition to Shinya's contributions, the first two albums were made up of several cover songs. Their third album Insane was a step in a new direction, it was not only the first all-Roosters album with no cover material, but it also featured the first Roosters song not written and composed by Shinya: 'Baby Sitter', written and composed by Inoue Tomio. This was the first sign of a more democratic Roosters, and it paved the way for Hanada to compose songs for their fourth album Dis. The Roosters' sixth album φPHY was Ohe's last with the group, with only about half of the record credited to him. The rest of the album is credited to Shibayama Toshiyuki (柴山 俊之) for his lyrics and Hanada for his musical compositions. Shibayama continued to write a large portion of the lyrics for the group until they broke up, but never played with them or was an official member. In 1985 Ohe Shinya decided to take an indefinite break from making music and left the band. Despite losing an integral member of the band the Roosters pressed on and released their seventh album Neon Boy less than nine months after Ohe's departure. A single track on Neon Boy, 'Out Land', was Shimoyama Jun's first contribution as a songwriter and composer for the group. Shimoyama continued to write lyrics and music for the band along with Hanada until the band's dissolution in 1988. Recent EventsIn March of 1999 a tribute album entitled Respectable Roosters was released to much renewed interest in the Roosters. It featured Japanese bands The Pillows, Thee Michelle Gun Elephant, Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra, Kemuri and others performing covers of songs by the Roosters. After being out of the spotlight for over ten years, this album introduced a new generation to the music of the Roosters and propelled them to the status of musical icons, garnering them recognition as a source of inspiration for many of today's Japanese rock bands. In the year 2002, four of the original Roosters from various incarnations came together to form the Rock'n'Roll Gypsies, who have put out one album to date and continue to make music together. In 2004 Ohe Shinya ended his lengthy musical hiatus to reunite with the original lineup of the Roosters for one last concert. Billed by their website as the Roosters' last live appearance, the Roosters performed at the 2004 Fuji Rock Festival in Naeba, Japan. They played on the first day of the three day festival: Friday July 30, 2004. In September 2004, a box set consisting of most of the Roosters' recorded material, rarities, live recordings and several DVDs. It retails for ¥49,800 (or about US$470), and consists of 27 CDs and 6 DVDs. The set contains every original album and EP, several discs of live performances, and a few discs of unreleased studio material. The DVDs contain several live shows, including their last live performance at the Fuji Rock Festival in 2004. Also included is a documentary made by Japanese director Sogo Ishii on the band's 2004 reunion. Their music is only distributed in Japan through Columbia—which offers the original 11 Roosters albums—and Universal, which distributes Rock'n'Roll Gypsies. Lineups
Discography
External Links
Categories: Rock music groups | Japanese musical groups |
|
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia article. Browse Wikipedia for more information. |