
Kuroyume (黒夢, lit. Black Dream) was a Japanese rock group that formed in Nagoya during May 1991, initially consisting of lead singer and founding member Kiyoharu (1968-10-30), guitarist Shin and bassist Hitoki (1972-7-19). They began as a visual kei group, and carried these roots throughout their career with continued emphasis on appearance and packaging. The band had an extensive influence on the visual...
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Kuroyume (黒夢, lit. Black Dream) was a Japanese rock group that formed in Nagoya during May 1991, initially consisting of lead singer and founding member Kiyoharu (1968-10-30), guitarist Shin and bassist Hitoki (1972-7-19). They began as a visual kei group, and carried these roots throughout their career with continued emphasis on appearance and packaging. The band had an extensive influence on the visual kei scene, being credited as inspirations by many of the bands of the late '90's visual kei boom. The band was suspended for an indefinite period on January 29, 1999. The group was officially disbanded by the final live on January 29, 2009. Following the band's departure from existence, Kiyoharu formed Sads in 1999 and had gone solo by 2003. After several years of performing live the band released their debut maxi single "Chuuzetsu" in 1992 on Haunted House Records, which was shortly followed by a mini album entitled Ikiteita Chuzetsuji... (remastered from an old demo tape). The music recorded by the band during this era appears indebted to black metal and goth rock which became an influential style within the Visual Kei scene, creating a new type of gothic rock that was mimicked and prevailed in the following years. A year later, Nakigara O... was released and clearly showed the group progressing in a more melodic direction by leaning further toward the goth side of things and doing away completely with any semblance of black metal (or indeed any form of metal music). The song "Shinainaru Death Mask" from their first album had been rerecorded and the band's first promotional music video (PV) was filmed for the song, but everything else was new material. No singles had been released since 1992. Shortly after signing with EMI in early 1994, Kuroyume released their first major label single "For Dear" to promote the forthcoming album Mayoeru Yuritachi. Two promotional videos were filmed, one for the aforementioned single and another for album track "Autism". In late 1994, the mini album Cruel and single ICE MY LIFE were released and introduced a poppier Kuroyume. No longer as sartorially overblown as before, the band dressed more conservatively for the new CD sleeves and in their latest videos. The new look was reminiscent of 1980s New Romantic fashion and seemed to give off a more palatable image to mainstream buyers. The music on "Cruel" was adherent to pop sensibility, no matter how loud and abrasive (as on the songs "Chandler" or "Sick") which helped give the new songs universal appeal. In 1995, Shin left the group, due to musical differences, and to focus on his other band Vinyl. From then on, Kuroyume would record and perform as a duo, alongside support musicians. The two albums following this arrangement of band priorities, 1995's Feminism and 1996's FAKE STAR, continued the visually-oriented mainstream pop rock of "Cruel" with the latter of the two having edgier production and presenting a more fashionable image. In 1996, Kuroyume won the Japanese International Viewer's Choice Award at the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards for the song "Pistol" from the FAKE STAR album. 1997 heralded another radical image change for Kuroyume, who were a punk influenced rock 'n roll band both visually and musically for the albums Drug treatment and CORKSCREW. Their releases continued to sell well. In 1999, citing Hitoki's personal health difficulties, Kuroyume was suspended for an indefinite period.
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