- Zone (band)
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Zone Origin Sapporo, Japan Genres Pop, pop rock Years active 1999–2005, 2011 Labels Sony Music Records Past members Miyu Nagase
Mizuho Saito
Tomoka Nishimura
Maiko Sakae
Takayo OokoshiZone was an all-female pop rock band started in Sapporo, Japan in 1999. Although it initially started as a dance group, they turned to an all-female band. Zone has been categorized in a new genre called "bandol" (a portmanteau of the words band and idol). The band was started by Studio RunTime and released their first single, "Good Days", under the major record label Sony Records, on February 7, 2001.
Their most famous song is "Secret Base (Kimi ga Kureta Mono)", released on August 8, 2001. The single sold about 744,000 copies on Japanese Oricon charts.[1]
Contents
History
Zone started off with eight members in 1997, then reduced to six and finally to four – Miyu Nagase, Mizuho Saito, Maiko Sakae, and Takayo Ookoshi – by the time they released their first indie disc in 1999.
Tadayuki Ominami, a representative of Sony Records, noticed that the crowd reaction to the group's debut concert was particularly enthusiastic. Initially, Zone was solely focused on singing and dancing. Ominami watched a live video of the band playing with instruments at the KomeKome Klub and felt that, due to the overabundance of dance groups, Zone had the makings of a breakthrough act, provided they could play their instruments as well as sing and dance.
In late 2003, Takayo Ookoshi announced her departure from Zone to pursue her studies and was replaced by Tomoka Nishimura, one of the two original members cut from the band when they scaled from six members to four.
Between 1999 and 2005, Zone released seventeen hit singles, three full-length CDs, and three DVDs, appeared in commercials, and had their own television special, in addition to attending high school. They all graduated.
Zone officially disbanded on April 1, 2005, after playing their final concert at Nippon Budokan. On April 13, their greatest hits album E: Complete A Side Singles was released. The album debuted at number 1 with first-week sales of about 98,000 copies, becoming their first number-one album on Japanese Oricon charts.[2]
Band members
- Takayo Ookoshi (大越貴代 Ookoshi Takayo ) —vocals, guitar & leader (1999–2003)
- Miyu Nagase (長瀬実夕 Nagase Miyu )—lead vocals & guitar (1999–2005)
- Mizuho Saito (斎藤瑞穂 Saito Mizuho )—vocals, drums (1999–2005); took over the leader's position after Takayo's departure
- Maiko Sakae (栄舞子 Sakae Maiko )—vocals & bass guitar (1999–2005)
- Tomoka Nishimura (西村朝香 Nishimura Tomoka )—vocals & guitar (2004–2005)
Music
Zone's music has been used in the 2003 Astro Boy series (opening theme, "True Blue" and second ending theme, "Tetsuwan Atomu: ballad version") and the Japanese release of Ice Age (theme song, "Hitoshizuku").
"Shiroi Hana" was used as the theme song to Final Fantasy Tactics Advance in Japan.
"Secret Base (Kimi ga Kureta Mono)" were covered by SCANDAL and used as the ending theme to the anime Kyō no Go no Ni and Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae o Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai.
Discography
Singles
- "Believe in Love" (December 18, 1999) (indies)
- "Good Days" (February 7, 2001)
- "Dai Bakuhatsu No.1" (大爆発 No.1 ) (May 23, 2001)
- "Secret Base (Kimi ga Kureta Mono)" (Secret Base ~君がくれたもの~ ) (August 8, 2001)
- "Sekai no Hon no Katasumi kara" (世界のほんの片隅から ) (November 14, 2001)
- "Yume no Kakera..." (夢ノカケラ... ) (February 14, 2002)
- "Hitoshizuku" (一雫 ) (July 17, 2002)
- "Akashi" (証 ) (September 26, 2002)
- "Shiroi Hana" (白い花 ) (November 27, 2002)
- "True Blue/Renren..." (True Blue/恋々... ) (April 16, 2003)
- "Hanabi (Kimi ga Ita Natsu)" (H・A・N・A・B・I ~君がいた夏~ ) (July 30, 2003)
- "Boku no Tegami" (僕の手紙 ) (October 29, 2003)
- "Sotsugyō" (卒業 ) (February 4, 2004)
- "Taiyō no Kiss" (太陽のKiss ) (June 2, 2004)
- "Glory Colors (Kaze no Tobira)" (Glory Colors ~風のトビラ~ ) (August 4, 2004)
- "Egao Biyori" (笑顔日和 ) (March 9, 2005)
Studio albums
- Z (February 14, 2002)
- O (November 27, 2002)
- N (February 18, 2004)
- E: Complete A side Singles (2 discs) (April 13, 2005)
- Ura E: Complete B side Melodies (April 19, 2006)
Other album appearances
- Music for Atom Age (March 19, 2003)
- Astro Girlz & Boyz (July 16, 2003)
- Love for Nana: Only 1 Tribute (March 16, 2005)
DVDs
- Zone Clips 01: Sunny Side (October 29, 2003)
- Zone Clips 02: Forever Side (March 17, 2004)
- Zone TV special "Yume Hajimatta Bakari" DVD edition (Zone TV special "ユメハジマッタバカリ" DVD edition ) (September 29, 2004)
- Zone Clips 03: 2005 Sotsugyō (Zone Clips 03 ~2005 卒業~ ) (May 18, 2005)
- Zone Final in Nippon Budokan 2005/04/01: Kokoro o Komete Arigatou (Zone Final in 日本武道館 2005/04/01 ~心を込めてありがとう~ Zone Final Live in Nippon Budokan: Thank You from the Bottom of My Heart ) (June 22, 2005)
- Zone Best Memorial Clips (May 24, 2006)
References
- ^ "ガールズバンド特集『新旧ガールズバンド大集合!人気のガールズバンドはこれだ!!』" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2006-05-24. http://www.oricon.co.jp/music/special/060524_02.html. Retrieved 2009-11-23.
- ^ "ZONE、解散後で初のNO.1に!" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2005-04-19. http://www.oricon.co.jp/news/ranking/4736/. Retrieved 2009-11-23.
External links
Categories:- All-female bands
- Japanese girl groups
- Japanese idol groups
- Japanese musical groups
- Sony Music Japan artists
- Japanese pop music groups
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