Jump to content

The Reverend

Iconic Members
  • Content Count

    1193
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    23

Reputation Activity

  1. Like
    The Reverend reacted to VESSMIER in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    nuvɔːgu is actually the incomplete IPA notation of the japanese pronounciation of 'new vogue' - incomplete because the stress indicator (as well as intonation markers) are missing, although I'm guessing the stress would be on the second syllable: [nuˈvɔːgu]. The [ɔ] signifies a specific way of pronouncing the letter 'o'. In this case it corresponds with the 'o' in words like 'not' or 'shot'. The weird little colon indicates stress on the preceding syllable. 
    There's a couple of bands who use(d) IPA in their bandnames: Act∫uə √èil (the only real IPA characters here being [∫] which corresponds to the 'sh' sound in words like 'shoot' or 'shine' and schwa [ə], c.f. separate. Another rather elaborate one would be:【zɔ́:diæ̀k】 - unsurprisingly the IPA form of a somewhat engrish pronounciation of the word 'zodiac' (which in AE would actually look like this: [ˈzoʊdiˌæk]; in BE like this: [ˈzəʊdɪæk].
  2. Like
    The Reverend reacted to suji in 君は鋭く。 (kimi ha surudoku.) live-limited 1st mini-album, "quiet room" release   
    君は鋭く。 (kimi ha surudoku.) live-limited 1st mini-album, "quiet room" (2000 yen) will be released at their live event, "残響、攪拌、振動覚についてvol.12" at Takadanobaba AREA.
     
    [tracklist]
    1.視聴覚室
    2.ザザ鳴る
    3.バニラスカイ
    4.Orchestra sleep quietly
    5.呼吸音
    *tracklist is subject to change
  3. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Yukami in IGGY new single "a Vision" release   
    IGGY new single "a Vision" will be released at 2018/05/02. 
     

     
    TrackList:
    01. a Vision
    02. 神威
     

     
     
  4. Like
    The Reverend got a reaction from VESSMIER in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    One of the small joys of being a VK fan is the unique phenomenon of enjoying a band while having absolutely no idea how to say their name. And I don’t mean because a band’s name is in Japanese, I’m talking those band names that are ostensibly written in English but because of weird characters or punctuation you just have no idea how to properly pronounce or verbalize their moniker correctly (although most of the time the pronunciation just completely ignores the extraneous symbols).
     
    Let’s try and trace the history of these unnecessary symbols and letters in VK bands’ names and highlight the influence (or lack thereof) of these punctuation provocateurs.
     
     
    D’erlanger

     
    The band: One of the proto-visual kei bands that began in the ‘80s and had an outsize influence on the first generation of post-X visual bands.
     
    The name: D’erlanger kinda makes sense as a French word, so they themselves are forgiven, but it is apparent a lot of teenagers in the 80s who would go on to become players in the golden age of visual kei saw that apostrophe and thought “oh cool!” for entirely unintended reasons.
     
    I said D’erlanger makes sense as a French word… but it’s not a very ‘band name’ kind of word. Can’t imagine throwing up the metal horns to a band called ‘from Erlangen’.
     
    See also: L’Arc~en~Ciel, La’Cryma Cristi, La’Mule
     
     
    L’Arc~en~Ciel

     
    The band: No introduction necessary really. Almost certainly on the Mount Rushmore of VK bands, whether or not you like what they’ve done since the start of the new millennium (and I don’t). Pretty and melodious songs with just enough edge to appeal to a wide swath of fans. Not to mention a sexy frontman.
     
    The name: Another word that makes sense if you’re French, but L’Arc~en~Ciel up the ante by adding some tildes for no reason other than young Tetsuya and Hyde probably thought they added an even more magical feeling to the word ‘rainbow’.
     
    L’Arc~en~Ciel’s (making their name possessive *does* add a certain balance to the word…) popularity in both VK circles and a mainstream audience meant that adding dumb punctuation in the middle of your name for no reason was now completely tolerated.
     
    Tetsuya has specifically denied he got the L’Arc~en~Ciel moniker from a cafe near where he worked as a teenager with the same name. It may have also been stolen from the D.H. Lawrence book ‘Rainbow’, but even that story is tainted because it includes the *movie* version.
     
    See also: a million song and album titles with tildes in them, E’m ~grief~
     
     
    cali≠gari

     
    The band: Either groundbreaking, experimental rock that revolutionized and kick-started the ‘eroguro kei’ genre, or dissonant-sounding weirdos; depending on your tastes.
     
    The name: Obviously lifted from the groundbreaking German silent horror film “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”; an admittedly cool source of inspiration for an art-y VK band. The name even has a cool rhyme and visual symmetry when written/pronounced in Japanese (カリガリ).
     
    See also: a ton of also-ran bands that have stuck unnecessary equals signs in their names: Loz'a≠Veria, D≒sire, Kar+te=zyAnose, Eyes≒Mirrorge, PARANOID≠CIRCUS
     
     
    ZI:KILL

     
    The band: Early VK rockers that burned out too quickly to be mentioned among the all-timers.
     
    The name: Originally formed as G:KILL, which doesn’t shed any light onto the inspiration for the name, but is an interesting fact. G/Zi:Kill both *kinda* sound like Jekyll when katakan-ized, and Visual Kei has no lack of love for that story.
     
    You may be noticing a trend so far; early VK bands apparently hated having blank spaces in their names.
     
    See also: La:Sadie’s, ru:natic,【_Vani;lla】, ha;qch, DAS:VASSER, L'yse:nore
     
     
    Aliene Maφriage

     
    The band: One of the harbingers of VK starting to get really dark and almost certainly offending the middle-aged parents of the teenagers listening to it. Lots of leather and hair... and in Aliene’s case; some good songwriting to back it up.
     
    The name: In the book Freakonomics the authors cite a study that shows, all other things being equal, people are more likely to be asked to interview for jobs if the interviewer/hiring manager can pronounce their name. I have to believe this is why even Kyoka & Co. started writing their name simply Aliene Ma’riage eventually; they were probably tired of having to pitch things to record label execs who looked at their name and thought “pass” before they even heard the banshee wails.
     
    I couldn’t find anything about the origins of their name. It is a vast improvement over their original moniker Autism though.
     
    See also: √eight, ∋elf gravity∈, ZETSURIN⚡HAGUKI
     
     
    Kagrra,

     
    The band: The undisputed kings of beautiful neo-japonisme in VK.
     
    The name: Even Kagrra,, who peddled a very classic Japanese aesthetic, weren’t immune to an unnecessary flourish such as a comma at the end of their name which, when spoken, led to a kind of hesitant mumble as if you were supposed to continue a train of thought which was still at the station. I mean, revisit that previous sentence I wrote, should it really have been written “Even Kagrra,,”? Kagrra,’s name certainly gave the editing staff at Shoxx a headache.
     
    Kagrra,, originally called Crow, took their name from 神楽 (Kagura), a Shinto music and dance tradition.
     
    See also: Thankfully the comma didn’t catch on much.
     
     
    +DéspairsRay+

     
    The band: One of the rare examples of a band who can pull off unabashed zetsubou unironically and follow it up with soaring choruses and catchy melodies without sounding disjointed.
     
    The name: Another band that dropped some of the more superfluous parts of their name as soon as they started to gain some popularity. If I had to guess, their name is probably one of the most mistagged in VK. I know for sure if I opened iTunes right now I’d have songs by +DéspairsRay+, DéspairsRay, D’espairs Ray, Despairs Ray and probably more in my artist lineup.
     
    The members of the band haven’t commented specifically on how they chose the name, with Zero even saying “It's nothing special.” I interpret this as ‘we know it’s dumb, don’t ask about it please’.
     
    See also: VAL+IX+LIA, MARRY+AN+BLOOD, Ti+Dee
     
     
    Nuvc:gu

     
    The band: Nobodies.
     
    The name: I honestly was pronouncing this “nuv-ka-goo” until I heard @Biopanda say “New vogue” in a Rarezhut stream and the lightbulb went off. I almost want to give them credit for using the *shape* of punctuation to emulate letters, but then I realize that’s incredibly stupid unless you’re working with some seriously custom fonts.
     
    See also: VΩID, k@mikaze, SHAD∞W, XOVER
     
     
    Exist†trace

     
    The band: Probably the most successful all-girl-kei band ever (which unfortunately isn’t saying much). Started out very gothy and have gradually transitioned to a more mainstream sound. They let the pretty one sing and it makes me sad because Jyou has come up with some flat out beautiful, haunting vocal melodies.
     
    The name: Miko said in an interview that,
     
    And let’s be honest, that explanation makes no sense. It sounds cool though, and really that’s what you need in a band name (and something unique that can be Googled).
     
    My biggest problem with their cross symbol is that it probably shows up as a question mark or some other placeholder punctuation 20% of the time because who the hell has the time to look up the unicode symbols? (although I’m sure people who write about Witch-house bands have the code for the cross symbol memorized.)
     
    See also: Serpentine†Ghost, Jail†Breaker, Vice†risk
     
     
    xTripx

     
    The band: A surprisingly endearing mix of oshare kei and numetal.
     
    The name: Weirdly, I always pronounce the first ‘x’ in xTripx’s name but not the last one (ecks-trip). I actually think more bands need to come to terms with the fact that eventually the world will run out of new band names and everyone will have to resort to having a moniker that looks like a circa-2002 emo fan’s AIM screenname.
     
    See also: xジハードx, 【TRiANGLE▼SONiX】, Noi’X
     
     
    12012

     
    The band: Undercode stalwarts that started out lo-fi and disjointed and nu-metal influenced but very charming, and graduated to poppier fare when they decided to take a stab at becoming famous.
     
    The name: ‘Ichi ni zero ichi ni’ if you’re Japanese, ‘twelve-o’-twelve’ if you’re me. Allegedly named after a section of the California penal code that deals with illegal weapons… and that actually kind of tracks. It’s an extremely boring section though (besides we know Wataru prefers hand-to-hand combat):
     
     
    Not a cool law for a band name. I think we’ve got a retconned term a la 420 and 311.
     
    See also: Plenty of other band names that need a pronunciation guide:  0801弐209XX6* (zero hachi), …。(silence), 6→7 (upper)
     
    *The guitarist of zero hachi should get an unnecessary punctuation in band names lifetime achievement award. He was in all these bands according to vkdb: †Zaide†,  Diod'honneur,  カレヰド, re:Make, 0801弐209XX6.
     
    Be sure to add your favorite band name with unnecessary punctuation!
  5. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Yukami in ユメリープ (Yumeleep) new mini-album †けぷけぷまたー† (kepu kepu matter) release   
    New Look

     
    Individual look:
     
    vo.まくらネム

     
    gt.たまて

     
    ba.おもち

     
    dr.うらら

  6. Like
    The Reverend reacted to ghost in Mouse on the Keys new album "tres" release   
    Preorders for Mouse on the Key's third album are open from Topshelf Records. You can choose from a variety of formats including CD and vinyl. The album releases on May 23rd 2018.
     

     
    Pre-order
    Sample
     
     
    *I gotta say, the sample sounds niiiiiiice
     
  7. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Yukami in BLESS THIS MESS 1st EP "blind Circus." release + new member   
    BLESS THIS MESS 1st EP "blind Circus." will be released at 2018/07/04.
    Ba.Rega (ex-TOON-FACTORY --> SRASH NOTES GARDEN --> NIA) has officially joined.
     

     
    Individual Look:
     
    vo.柳(Yanagi)

     
    gt.立石恁 (Tateishi Jin)

     
    ba.Rega

     
    TrackList:
    01. 蝋涙に死す。
    02. MIRROR MIRROR
    03. DISDAIN
    04. Lost Sphear
    05. VENOM
     
     
  8. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Senedjem in 狂太郎 (Kyotaro) (ex-√eight-->Black:List) new band "LAY ABOUT WORLD" has formed   
    all the "who?" 's are making me feel a million years old 
  9. Like
    The Reverend got a reaction from Kaleidoscope in Post-black metal/Blackgaze/Symphonic black metal/Experimental black metal   
    Amen. Ghost Bath were way better when we had no idea who they were and everyone thought they were from China.
  10. Like
    The Reverend got a reaction from emmny in Show Yourself (again)   
    That crisp mountain air.
  11. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Kaleidoscope in Post-black metal/Blackgaze/Symphonic black metal/Experimental black metal   
    I am not turned off by the image of a band often, but Ghost Bath's interviews, videos and live performances were a little too much for my taste haha
     
    Heard of Madman's Esprit before, going to check them out later. DWEF are indeed really good, I also recommend Ära Krâ if you like them, even though they are disbanded by now unfortunately.
  12. Like
    The Reverend got a reaction from dovesi in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    One of the small joys of being a VK fan is the unique phenomenon of enjoying a band while having absolutely no idea how to say their name. And I don’t mean because a band’s name is in Japanese, I’m talking those band names that are ostensibly written in English but because of weird characters or punctuation you just have no idea how to properly pronounce or verbalize their moniker correctly (although most of the time the pronunciation just completely ignores the extraneous symbols).
     
    Let’s try and trace the history of these unnecessary symbols and letters in VK bands’ names and highlight the influence (or lack thereof) of these punctuation provocateurs.
     
     
    D’erlanger

     
    The band: One of the proto-visual kei bands that began in the ‘80s and had an outsize influence on the first generation of post-X visual bands.
     
    The name: D’erlanger kinda makes sense as a French word, so they themselves are forgiven, but it is apparent a lot of teenagers in the 80s who would go on to become players in the golden age of visual kei saw that apostrophe and thought “oh cool!” for entirely unintended reasons.
     
    I said D’erlanger makes sense as a French word… but it’s not a very ‘band name’ kind of word. Can’t imagine throwing up the metal horns to a band called ‘from Erlangen’.
     
    See also: L’Arc~en~Ciel, La’Cryma Cristi, La’Mule
     
     
    L’Arc~en~Ciel

     
    The band: No introduction necessary really. Almost certainly on the Mount Rushmore of VK bands, whether or not you like what they’ve done since the start of the new millennium (and I don’t). Pretty and melodious songs with just enough edge to appeal to a wide swath of fans. Not to mention a sexy frontman.
     
    The name: Another word that makes sense if you’re French, but L’Arc~en~Ciel up the ante by adding some tildes for no reason other than young Tetsuya and Hyde probably thought they added an even more magical feeling to the word ‘rainbow’.
     
    L’Arc~en~Ciel’s (making their name possessive *does* add a certain balance to the word…) popularity in both VK circles and a mainstream audience meant that adding dumb punctuation in the middle of your name for no reason was now completely tolerated.
     
    Tetsuya has specifically denied he got the L’Arc~en~Ciel moniker from a cafe near where he worked as a teenager with the same name. It may have also been stolen from the D.H. Lawrence book ‘Rainbow’, but even that story is tainted because it includes the *movie* version.
     
    See also: a million song and album titles with tildes in them, E’m ~grief~
     
     
    cali≠gari

     
    The band: Either groundbreaking, experimental rock that revolutionized and kick-started the ‘eroguro kei’ genre, or dissonant-sounding weirdos; depending on your tastes.
     
    The name: Obviously lifted from the groundbreaking German silent horror film “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”; an admittedly cool source of inspiration for an art-y VK band. The name even has a cool rhyme and visual symmetry when written/pronounced in Japanese (カリガリ).
     
    See also: a ton of also-ran bands that have stuck unnecessary equals signs in their names: Loz'a≠Veria, D≒sire, Kar+te=zyAnose, Eyes≒Mirrorge, PARANOID≠CIRCUS
     
     
    ZI:KILL

     
    The band: Early VK rockers that burned out too quickly to be mentioned among the all-timers.
     
    The name: Originally formed as G:KILL, which doesn’t shed any light onto the inspiration for the name, but is an interesting fact. G/Zi:Kill both *kinda* sound like Jekyll when katakan-ized, and Visual Kei has no lack of love for that story.
     
    You may be noticing a trend so far; early VK bands apparently hated having blank spaces in their names.
     
    See also: La:Sadie’s, ru:natic,【_Vani;lla】, ha;qch, DAS:VASSER, L'yse:nore
     
     
    Aliene Maφriage

     
    The band: One of the harbingers of VK starting to get really dark and almost certainly offending the middle-aged parents of the teenagers listening to it. Lots of leather and hair... and in Aliene’s case; some good songwriting to back it up.
     
    The name: In the book Freakonomics the authors cite a study that shows, all other things being equal, people are more likely to be asked to interview for jobs if the interviewer/hiring manager can pronounce their name. I have to believe this is why even Kyoka & Co. started writing their name simply Aliene Ma’riage eventually; they were probably tired of having to pitch things to record label execs who looked at their name and thought “pass” before they even heard the banshee wails.
     
    I couldn’t find anything about the origins of their name. It is a vast improvement over their original moniker Autism though.
     
    See also: √eight, ∋elf gravity∈, ZETSURIN⚡HAGUKI
     
     
    Kagrra,

     
    The band: The undisputed kings of beautiful neo-japonisme in VK.
     
    The name: Even Kagrra,, who peddled a very classic Japanese aesthetic, weren’t immune to an unnecessary flourish such as a comma at the end of their name which, when spoken, led to a kind of hesitant mumble as if you were supposed to continue a train of thought which was still at the station. I mean, revisit that previous sentence I wrote, should it really have been written “Even Kagrra,,”? Kagrra,’s name certainly gave the editing staff at Shoxx a headache.
     
    Kagrra,, originally called Crow, took their name from 神楽 (Kagura), a Shinto music and dance tradition.
     
    See also: Thankfully the comma didn’t catch on much.
     
     
    +DéspairsRay+

     
    The band: One of the rare examples of a band who can pull off unabashed zetsubou unironically and follow it up with soaring choruses and catchy melodies without sounding disjointed.
     
    The name: Another band that dropped some of the more superfluous parts of their name as soon as they started to gain some popularity. If I had to guess, their name is probably one of the most mistagged in VK. I know for sure if I opened iTunes right now I’d have songs by +DéspairsRay+, DéspairsRay, D’espairs Ray, Despairs Ray and probably more in my artist lineup.
     
    The members of the band haven’t commented specifically on how they chose the name, with Zero even saying “It's nothing special.” I interpret this as ‘we know it’s dumb, don’t ask about it please’.
     
    See also: VAL+IX+LIA, MARRY+AN+BLOOD, Ti+Dee
     
     
    Nuvc:gu

     
    The band: Nobodies.
     
    The name: I honestly was pronouncing this “nuv-ka-goo” until I heard @Biopanda say “New vogue” in a Rarezhut stream and the lightbulb went off. I almost want to give them credit for using the *shape* of punctuation to emulate letters, but then I realize that’s incredibly stupid unless you’re working with some seriously custom fonts.
     
    See also: VΩID, k@mikaze, SHAD∞W, XOVER
     
     
    Exist†trace

     
    The band: Probably the most successful all-girl-kei band ever (which unfortunately isn’t saying much). Started out very gothy and have gradually transitioned to a more mainstream sound. They let the pretty one sing and it makes me sad because Jyou has come up with some flat out beautiful, haunting vocal melodies.
     
    The name: Miko said in an interview that,
     
    And let’s be honest, that explanation makes no sense. It sounds cool though, and really that’s what you need in a band name (and something unique that can be Googled).
     
    My biggest problem with their cross symbol is that it probably shows up as a question mark or some other placeholder punctuation 20% of the time because who the hell has the time to look up the unicode symbols? (although I’m sure people who write about Witch-house bands have the code for the cross symbol memorized.)
     
    See also: Serpentine†Ghost, Jail†Breaker, Vice†risk
     
     
    xTripx

     
    The band: A surprisingly endearing mix of oshare kei and numetal.
     
    The name: Weirdly, I always pronounce the first ‘x’ in xTripx’s name but not the last one (ecks-trip). I actually think more bands need to come to terms with the fact that eventually the world will run out of new band names and everyone will have to resort to having a moniker that looks like a circa-2002 emo fan’s AIM screenname.
     
    See also: xジハードx, 【TRiANGLE▼SONiX】, Noi’X
     
     
    12012

     
    The band: Undercode stalwarts that started out lo-fi and disjointed and nu-metal influenced but very charming, and graduated to poppier fare when they decided to take a stab at becoming famous.
     
    The name: ‘Ichi ni zero ichi ni’ if you’re Japanese, ‘twelve-o’-twelve’ if you’re me. Allegedly named after a section of the California penal code that deals with illegal weapons… and that actually kind of tracks. It’s an extremely boring section though (besides we know Wataru prefers hand-to-hand combat):
     
     
    Not a cool law for a band name. I think we’ve got a retconned term a la 420 and 311.
     
    See also: Plenty of other band names that need a pronunciation guide:  0801弐209XX6* (zero hachi), …。(silence), 6→7 (upper)
     
    *The guitarist of zero hachi should get an unnecessary punctuation in band names lifetime achievement award. He was in all these bands according to vkdb: †Zaide†,  Diod'honneur,  カレヰド, re:Make, 0801弐209XX6.
     
    Be sure to add your favorite band name with unnecessary punctuation!
  13. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Yukami in La'Veil MizeriA due to release a new single in April: "薄紅ノ葬"   
    Individual look:
     
    vo.Kikyo

     
    gt.Jaki

     
    gt.Nazuki

     
    ba.Milia

  14. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Peace Heavy mk II in La'Veil MizeriA due to release a new single in April: "薄紅ノ葬"   
    Hey guys, saw that you’re actually selling CDs now. It’d be cool if I was part of the band again, you know, for nostalgia :^)
  15. Like
    The Reverend reacted to plastic_rainbow in envy returns with new lineup   
    @The Reverendyes, i did go!! it was amazing, everybody was ripping the floor after seeing/hearing news that tetsuya was back!
    this is probably the biggest april fools joke in jmusic history. i think they planned this way ahead.
  16. Like
    The Reverend reacted to inartistic in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    Everyone knows one of kyo's early bands was Visnu, but it's actually supposed to be written Viṣṇu (with dots under the s and n--dunno if it'll show up here).
     
    A recent fav of mine is CμЯЁ-βLAST. Just a random no1curr band, but I'm a fan of the “more is more” band name.
     
    If I had to give an actual guess as to why this is a “thing” in vk, I'd guess that it probably traces back to gothic influence in late 80s/early 90s. And I also bet that it became popular in the early 90s due to computers making symbols/alternate letters more accessible. (Crazy that vk is old enough to be influenced by the “rise of computers” huh?)
  17. Like
    The Reverend got a reaction from yakihiko in HIKARU (カメレオ (Kameleo)) solo project, "L.A.LEMECCA" has formed   
    I'm torn... I miss Kameleo/Hikaru for sure... but I'm not sure I've ever actually liked a VK solo project.
     
    (I'll be in Tokyo during that show... kinda tempted)
  18. Like
    The Reverend got a reaction from YuyoDrift in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    One of the small joys of being a VK fan is the unique phenomenon of enjoying a band while having absolutely no idea how to say their name. And I don’t mean because a band’s name is in Japanese, I’m talking those band names that are ostensibly written in English but because of weird characters or punctuation you just have no idea how to properly pronounce or verbalize their moniker correctly (although most of the time the pronunciation just completely ignores the extraneous symbols).
     
    Let’s try and trace the history of these unnecessary symbols and letters in VK bands’ names and highlight the influence (or lack thereof) of these punctuation provocateurs.
     
     
    D’erlanger

     
    The band: One of the proto-visual kei bands that began in the ‘80s and had an outsize influence on the first generation of post-X visual bands.
     
    The name: D’erlanger kinda makes sense as a French word, so they themselves are forgiven, but it is apparent a lot of teenagers in the 80s who would go on to become players in the golden age of visual kei saw that apostrophe and thought “oh cool!” for entirely unintended reasons.
     
    I said D’erlanger makes sense as a French word… but it’s not a very ‘band name’ kind of word. Can’t imagine throwing up the metal horns to a band called ‘from Erlangen’.
     
    See also: L’Arc~en~Ciel, La’Cryma Cristi, La’Mule
     
     
    L’Arc~en~Ciel

     
    The band: No introduction necessary really. Almost certainly on the Mount Rushmore of VK bands, whether or not you like what they’ve done since the start of the new millennium (and I don’t). Pretty and melodious songs with just enough edge to appeal to a wide swath of fans. Not to mention a sexy frontman.
     
    The name: Another word that makes sense if you’re French, but L’Arc~en~Ciel up the ante by adding some tildes for no reason other than young Tetsuya and Hyde probably thought they added an even more magical feeling to the word ‘rainbow’.
     
    L’Arc~en~Ciel’s (making their name possessive *does* add a certain balance to the word…) popularity in both VK circles and a mainstream audience meant that adding dumb punctuation in the middle of your name for no reason was now completely tolerated.
     
    Tetsuya has specifically denied he got the L’Arc~en~Ciel moniker from a cafe near where he worked as a teenager with the same name. It may have also been stolen from the D.H. Lawrence book ‘Rainbow’, but even that story is tainted because it includes the *movie* version.
     
    See also: a million song and album titles with tildes in them, E’m ~grief~
     
     
    cali≠gari

     
    The band: Either groundbreaking, experimental rock that revolutionized and kick-started the ‘eroguro kei’ genre, or dissonant-sounding weirdos; depending on your tastes.
     
    The name: Obviously lifted from the groundbreaking German silent horror film “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”; an admittedly cool source of inspiration for an art-y VK band. The name even has a cool rhyme and visual symmetry when written/pronounced in Japanese (カリガリ).
     
    See also: a ton of also-ran bands that have stuck unnecessary equals signs in their names: Loz'a≠Veria, D≒sire, Kar+te=zyAnose, Eyes≒Mirrorge, PARANOID≠CIRCUS
     
     
    ZI:KILL

     
    The band: Early VK rockers that burned out too quickly to be mentioned among the all-timers.
     
    The name: Originally formed as G:KILL, which doesn’t shed any light onto the inspiration for the name, but is an interesting fact. G/Zi:Kill both *kinda* sound like Jekyll when katakan-ized, and Visual Kei has no lack of love for that story.
     
    You may be noticing a trend so far; early VK bands apparently hated having blank spaces in their names.
     
    See also: La:Sadie’s, ru:natic,【_Vani;lla】, ha;qch, DAS:VASSER, L'yse:nore
     
     
    Aliene Maφriage

     
    The band: One of the harbingers of VK starting to get really dark and almost certainly offending the middle-aged parents of the teenagers listening to it. Lots of leather and hair... and in Aliene’s case; some good songwriting to back it up.
     
    The name: In the book Freakonomics the authors cite a study that shows, all other things being equal, people are more likely to be asked to interview for jobs if the interviewer/hiring manager can pronounce their name. I have to believe this is why even Kyoka & Co. started writing their name simply Aliene Ma’riage eventually; they were probably tired of having to pitch things to record label execs who looked at their name and thought “pass” before they even heard the banshee wails.
     
    I couldn’t find anything about the origins of their name. It is a vast improvement over their original moniker Autism though.
     
    See also: √eight, ∋elf gravity∈, ZETSURIN⚡HAGUKI
     
     
    Kagrra,

     
    The band: The undisputed kings of beautiful neo-japonisme in VK.
     
    The name: Even Kagrra,, who peddled a very classic Japanese aesthetic, weren’t immune to an unnecessary flourish such as a comma at the end of their name which, when spoken, led to a kind of hesitant mumble as if you were supposed to continue a train of thought which was still at the station. I mean, revisit that previous sentence I wrote, should it really have been written “Even Kagrra,,”? Kagrra,’s name certainly gave the editing staff at Shoxx a headache.
     
    Kagrra,, originally called Crow, took their name from 神楽 (Kagura), a Shinto music and dance tradition.
     
    See also: Thankfully the comma didn’t catch on much.
     
     
    +DéspairsRay+

     
    The band: One of the rare examples of a band who can pull off unabashed zetsubou unironically and follow it up with soaring choruses and catchy melodies without sounding disjointed.
     
    The name: Another band that dropped some of the more superfluous parts of their name as soon as they started to gain some popularity. If I had to guess, their name is probably one of the most mistagged in VK. I know for sure if I opened iTunes right now I’d have songs by +DéspairsRay+, DéspairsRay, D’espairs Ray, Despairs Ray and probably more in my artist lineup.
     
    The members of the band haven’t commented specifically on how they chose the name, with Zero even saying “It's nothing special.” I interpret this as ‘we know it’s dumb, don’t ask about it please’.
     
    See also: VAL+IX+LIA, MARRY+AN+BLOOD, Ti+Dee
     
     
    Nuvc:gu

     
    The band: Nobodies.
     
    The name: I honestly was pronouncing this “nuv-ka-goo” until I heard @Biopanda say “New vogue” in a Rarezhut stream and the lightbulb went off. I almost want to give them credit for using the *shape* of punctuation to emulate letters, but then I realize that’s incredibly stupid unless you’re working with some seriously custom fonts.
     
    See also: VΩID, k@mikaze, SHAD∞W, XOVER
     
     
    Exist†trace

     
    The band: Probably the most successful all-girl-kei band ever (which unfortunately isn’t saying much). Started out very gothy and have gradually transitioned to a more mainstream sound. They let the pretty one sing and it makes me sad because Jyou has come up with some flat out beautiful, haunting vocal melodies.
     
    The name: Miko said in an interview that,
     
    And let’s be honest, that explanation makes no sense. It sounds cool though, and really that’s what you need in a band name (and something unique that can be Googled).
     
    My biggest problem with their cross symbol is that it probably shows up as a question mark or some other placeholder punctuation 20% of the time because who the hell has the time to look up the unicode symbols? (although I’m sure people who write about Witch-house bands have the code for the cross symbol memorized.)
     
    See also: Serpentine†Ghost, Jail†Breaker, Vice†risk
     
     
    xTripx

     
    The band: A surprisingly endearing mix of oshare kei and numetal.
     
    The name: Weirdly, I always pronounce the first ‘x’ in xTripx’s name but not the last one (ecks-trip). I actually think more bands need to come to terms with the fact that eventually the world will run out of new band names and everyone will have to resort to having a moniker that looks like a circa-2002 emo fan’s AIM screenname.
     
    See also: xジハードx, 【TRiANGLE▼SONiX】, Noi’X
     
     
    12012

     
    The band: Undercode stalwarts that started out lo-fi and disjointed and nu-metal influenced but very charming, and graduated to poppier fare when they decided to take a stab at becoming famous.
     
    The name: ‘Ichi ni zero ichi ni’ if you’re Japanese, ‘twelve-o’-twelve’ if you’re me. Allegedly named after a section of the California penal code that deals with illegal weapons… and that actually kind of tracks. It’s an extremely boring section though (besides we know Wataru prefers hand-to-hand combat):
     
     
    Not a cool law for a band name. I think we’ve got a retconned term a la 420 and 311.
     
    See also: Plenty of other band names that need a pronunciation guide:  0801弐209XX6* (zero hachi), …。(silence), 6→7 (upper)
     
    *The guitarist of zero hachi should get an unnecessary punctuation in band names lifetime achievement award. He was in all these bands according to vkdb: †Zaide†,  Diod'honneur,  カレヰド, re:Make, 0801弐209XX6.
     
    Be sure to add your favorite band name with unnecessary punctuation!
  19. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Zeus in PV Review: YELLOW by 8-eit   
    It's been three to four years since jazz band 8-eit went on a hiatus to "mature as a band". Based on the phrasing of the hiatus, I thought they would be gone from the scene for a few months, perhaps a year. I was not prepared for the 2007ish visual kei double-speak of "sorry, but we need to get our shit together" that extended their hiatus far past the patience of 95% of their fan base. They chose the worst time to stop; they finally found mild success, with their latest single (at the time) my bullet featured on Japanese commercials. Drama behind the scenes had other plans. For one, vocalist Tsubaki started his own solo project called Tsubaki-VOICE-, because in his mid-40's he saw this as his last opportunity to go solo. The old drummer and keyboardist departed from the band, while guitarist Daisuke Aradate left and returned. Tsubaki-VOICE- held activities for two to three years, but didn't see as much success as the 8-eit, and after a few mini-reunion gigs at weddings they decided on an official return late in 2017. I'm still not sure if the decision to pause activities was worth it. 8-eit slimmed down from a five-piece band to a four-piece band, found a new bassist and drummer, axed the keyboard, and oriented themselves in a direction between old 8-eit and Tsubaki-VOICE-. Their first album, yellow, was released late last year to little fanfare. I still haven't heard it, so I'll settle with a review of the music video of the lead single "yellow" for now.
     
    I hadn't noticed how much I loved Matsubara Kiyoshi's (old keyboardist) contributions until I heard this song. I miss them dearly, but his absence doesn't break the music. It will take some adjustment, but there is a lot left to like. Tsubaki is energetic as always, and Daisuke still brings the jazzy rock licks and solos that I remember him for, but the jury is still out on the two new members. The drummer makes eye contact with the viewer on multiple occasions, but the bassist is really into his instrument. The setting alternates between a green screen showcasing various geometric patterns in white and yellow and shots of the band playing against a white screen, stitched together with shots of singular members in black and white. There's no narrative to this PV. It's not as fancy as the liquor bar setting of the "戯れGOLD" PV, and I think this is because the band is working with a smaller budget than in the past. It's way better than the generic white room most visual kei bands do at least once in their career, but this is neither revolutionary nor a cause for inspiration. As far as the song goes...I can see why the internet isn't jumping for joy at the return of this band. It's not their best song, and it's not their worst, but I was expecting a bit more jazz and a bit less rock. Maybe they should think about bringing the keyboard back...
     
    In many ways, this is a good music video to start this (hopefully successful) series with because I find it exceedingly average in all respects. It's a good yard stick to measure future music videos against. If you are an 8-eit fan just like me, leave your thoughts below on any aspects to the music or video that stick out (or don't) to you. Hit the like button if you want to read more of my thoughts on various visual and non-visual music videos in the future.
     
     
  20. Like
    The Reverend reacted to seikun in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    If I well recall, Aliene Ma'riage means Alliance and Marriage.
  21. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Seelentau in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    @OP does it have to be band names?
     
    Another unnecessary stylisation I just noticed: Toshi is writing his name as "Toshl". With a lowercase L. Not an uppercase i. Just... why? Of course it's still read as "Toshi", too. I mean wtf xD
     
    Edit:  Apparently, this has to do with his old label still having the rights to his artist name? Dunno.
  22. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Shaolan974 in Last Concert You Went To (Now with Pics)   
    Ziskakan (maloya, sega, pop, rock) from Reunion Island
     
     
    Ziskakan is one of the best live band here. They formed 40 years ago and their music is amazing. Ziskakan is not only a music band, it's a cultural movement.
     
    Pamplemousse (noisy blues rock) from Reunion Island
     
     
    Magnetix (punk, garage rock) from France
     
     
    Le Prince Harry (synth-punk, coldwave, post-punk) from Belgium
     
     
    Minibar(D) (rock, grunge, alternative) from Reunion Island
     
    (no video)
     
    Tukatukas (punk, hardcore) from Reunion Island
     
     
    Mouse (guitar/drums, rock, post-rock, noise) from South Africa
     
     
     
    The Horny Bitches (punk, rock) from Montreal
     
     
     
    BOOBZ (rap, rock) from Reunion Island
     
    (no video)
     
    LORIZINE (maloya) from Reunion Island
     
     
    VACUUM ROAD (metal) from Reunion Island
     
     
    ROCUAR PALACE (prog, noise, post-rock) from Reunion Island
     
     
    Tell Me Peter (alternative rock) from Reunion Island
     
    (no video)
     
    No Leads (soul, funk), from Reunion Island
     
     
  23. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Shmilly in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    For the record, tildes are an incorrect Westernization of the Japanese 'wave dash' 〜, which is like a lengthened tilde. Laruku's actual name uses that, not the Western tilde. And the use of the wave dash in various song titles is legitimate and not a result of bands like Laruku becoming popular - in Japanese, it denotes subtitles. So for example, Gackt's 絵夢〜for my dear〜 could be romanized as M: For My Dear rather than using tildes.
  24. Like
    The Reverend reacted to Biopanda in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    I've always had a soft spot for the band ???, which is apparently supposed to be pronounced Hatena.
  25. Like
    The Reverend reacted to helcchi in A Brief History of Visual Kei: Unnecessary Symbols & Punctuation in Band Names   
    backwards letters courtesy the Cyrillic alphabet:
    CoЯe The Child, ReivieЯ, DiSPiИA, OUTЯAGE, MoЯGuE, Яe:sK
     
    Greek letters:
    α:Vout, Kαin, Λucifer, π乙, ν[NEU]
     
    Mathematical symbols:
    スゥイート×ホォム, +ISOLATION, DEVI+TEC, JACK+MW, EVER+LAST, Un=(XAG), エゴis≒徒, Be≒Luna
     
    ★STAR☆
    THE DEAD P☆P STARS, PANIC☆ch, DIS★Marionette, Crazy★shampoo, ワン★スター, ★NOハウス, Anzel☆Stripper【 AKR】, ネオロックンロールスタ→☆エース, RoNo☆Cro, RABBI★STAR, Death★Rabbits
     
    Currency symbols:
    「xxx」is D£AD, $”Casper.
     
    Numbers replacing letters:
    DI3SIRAE, ∞INFi2TY, VAN9ISH (vanquish)
     
    other punctuation, accents and symbols:
    SERIAL⇔NUMBER, Medi@lize, Ap(r)il, ∀NTI FEMINISM, CLØWD, the:Ø, Cu[be], C”LOW”N
    L’yse:nore, Silver~Rose, Black:List, Arc:g:noël
     
    Random capitalizations:
    NoGoD, MoNoLith, KuRt, UnsraW, Hi:BRiD, ViViD, NightingeiL, ALiBi, Blu-BiLLioN,  SaTaN, DixdriveR, Eze:quL, RevleZ, LUCHe., LAYZis, MeteoroiD, Cat fisT, uBuGoe, DEViL KiTTY, LiZ, iNSOMNiA


     
×
×
  • Create New...