K. Juno
K. Juno is a rock singer and songwriter from Japan.[1]
Music style[]
As a vocalist, Juno sings like a 1980s hard rock singer, while she writes rather 1970s rock flavored music. Juno also wrote the lyrics to the theme song for the Japanese CG animation Voices of a Distant Star by Makoto Shinkai, titled "Through the Years and Far Away (Hello, Little Star)".[citation needed]
Discography[]
Solo albums[]
- Love Me (2000, mini album, 5 tracks)
- Juno Vol. 1 plus Fate (2005, 10 tracks)
- Amazing Grace (Out of the Holy Hands of Fate) (2007, CD-R, 4 tracks) (sung in Japanese)
Singer/songwriter albums[]
Wave (Morrigan)[]
- Feline Groove II (2003, 1 new / 16 tracks)
- Voyager (2004, 1 new / 1 remix / 10 tracks plus bonus)
- Mo Nakanaide (2004, 2 new / 9 tracks)
- Avalon (2004, 3 new / 16 tracks; album arranged for Fate/stay night)
- Caldes (2005, 3 new / 16 tracks)
- Aria (2006, 1 new / 14 tracks)
- White Avalon (2006, 4 new / 22 tracks)
- Yoru o Koete (2007, 1 new / 2 remix / 8 tracks)
- Archiv-East (2007, 1 remix / 38 tracks)
- Message (2007, 4 new/9 remix/13 tracks, all sung by K. Juno)
Cranky[]
- Rave-Slave (2003, 1 remix / 14 tracks)
PsG System Laboratory[]
- Artifact (2003, 3 new / 39 tracks; Tsukinosabaki & Typing Moon Online original soundtrack)
- Typing Moon (2003, online typing game)
Fusion Works[]
- Aura - 12 Pieces of Remedy (2006, 1 new / 12 tracks)
Kenichi Kitakata[]
- Believe (2007, CD-R, backup vocals)
As a lyricist[]
- Voices of a Distant Star soundtrack CD, DVD
References[]
- ^ "K. JUNO on sure rock.net". surerock.net. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
External links[]
- K. Juno on sure rock.net
- Juno's Rock and Roll Paradise! (in Japanese)
Categories:
- Living people
- Japanese female rock singers
- Japanese women singer-songwriters
- Japanese singer-songwriters
- Japanese women pop singers
- Musicians from Osaka
- 20th-century Japanese singers
- 21st-century Japanese singers
- 20th-century Japanese women singers
- 21st-century Japanese women singers