Remioromen

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Remioromen
レミオロメン
GenresAlternative rock, pop rock
Years active2000 (2000)–present (on hiatus)
Labels
  • (2003),
  • Speedstar Records (2003–2008),
  • Oorong Records (from 2009)
Associated actsTakeshi Kobayashi, Makoto Minagawa
Websitewww.remioromen.jp
MembersRyota Fujimaki
Keisuke Maeda
Osamu Jingūji

Remioromen (レミオロメン) is a Japanese rock band, formed by Ryōta Fujimaki, Keisuke Maeda and Osamu Jingūji in 2000.

History[]

Remioromen was formed in December 2000 with their current three person line up. They say that the name of the band has no real significance as a whole and was instead the result of wordplay. Playing stones scissors and paper they allowed winners to decide one or more syllables first and losers to decide more syllables later. Fujimaki won and chose the first syllable from the Japanese phoneticization of the British band he liked "Radiohead", "re." Osamu Jingūji came second and chose his girlfriend's and his own given names' first syllables, "mio." Maeda came third, and since he liked trams, chose the first three syllables from the Japanese for tram "romendensha" (lit. road face train)". On November 25 of 2003 they did their first one-man live at Shibuya-AX. Since their inception the band has been steadily climbing to the top of the Oricon charts. For the release of Sangatsu Kokonoka (3月9日) (March 9) they returned to their home town in the Yamanashi Prefecture to perform live in their old school's gymnasium. In 2005 Sangatsu Kokonoka was used in a choral arrangement for the drama Ichi Rittoru no Namida (1 Litre Of Tears) and "Konayuki" was used as the insert song. For the release of the single Sangatsu Kokonoka was included in an arrangement with a string quartet. This gained the band a great deal of popularity and "Konayuki" became one of the best selling singles of 2005. Their third album Horizon has had high sales, making it # 1 on the Oricon Album charts for three weeks.

The first track in their album Kaze no Chroma, entitled "Tsubasa", was the ending theme in the movie Major: Yuujou no Winning Shot which was based on the hit baseball manga made by Takuya Mitsuda.

Though Remioromen has never had a single rank at number 1, their recent releases have stayed on the charts for long periods of time and their overall sales have been quite high. Remioromen generally sticks to laid back pop/rock with catchy hooks.

In MTV Video Music Awards Japan 2006 (MTV VMAJ 2006) Remioromen Music Video "Konayuki" won The Best Pop Video Award.

On 1 February 2012, an official announcement was made on their website, stating the suspension of the group. No explanations were given for the suspending of the band's activity.

Ryota Fujimaki, the lead vocalist and guitarist, debuted on 17 October 2012, with a solo album titled Ookami Seinen (オオカミ青年).

Members[]

  • Ryota Fujimaki (藤巻亮太, Fujimaki Ryōta) (b. January 12, 1980) is vocalist and plays guitar.
  • Keisuke Maeda (前田啓介, Maeda Keisuke) (b. September 11, 1979) plays bass guitar.
  • Osamu Jinguji (神宮司治, Jingūji Osamu) (b. March 5, 1980) plays drums.

Discography[]

Albums[]

Studio albums[]

Album # Album information Weekly
Albums
Charts
Year-End
Albums
Charts
Track listing Copies Sold
1st (朝顔)
  • Released: November 19, 2003
  • First Week Sales: 19,725
  • Chart Run: 65 weeks
  • Certification: Gold (RIAJ)
17 -
Track listing
113,152
2nd (ether[エーテル])
  • Released: March 9, 2005
  • First Week Sales: 95,427
  • Chart Run: 71 weeks
  • Certification: Platinum (RIAJ)
2 -
Track listing
402,205
3rd Horizon
  • Released: May 17, 2006
  • First Week Sales: 320,255
  • Chart Run: 56 weeks
  • Certification: Double Platinum (RIAJ)
1 16
Track listing
676,672
4th (風のクロマ)
  • Released: October 29, 2008
  • Oricon Weekly Ranking: No. 3
  • First Week Sales: 55,229
  • Chart Run: 21 weeks
3 128
Track listing
89,801
5th (花鳥風月)
  • Released: March 3, 2010
  • First Week Sales: 52,950
  • Chart Run: 12 weeks
2 92
Track listing
85,129

Compilation albums[]

Album # Album information Weekly
Albums
Charts
Year-End
Albums
Charts
Track listing Copies Sold
1st Remio Best (レミオベスト)
  • Released: March 9, 2009
  • First Week Sales: 280,599
  • Chart Run: 49 weeks
1 8
Track listing
508,679

Live albums[]

Album # Album information Weekly
Albums
Charts
Year-End
Albums
Charts
Track listing Copies Sold
1st
  • Released: November 1, 2006
  • First Week Sales: 51,318
  • Chart Run: 22 weeks
  • Certification: Gold (RIAJ)
4 -
Track listing
108,861
2nd
  • Released: April 27, 2011
  • First Week Sales: 7,068
  • Chart Run: 4 weeks
  • Certification:
14 -
Track listing
9,496

Mini-albums[]

Album # Album information Weekly
Albums
Charts
Year-End
Albums
Charts
Track listing Copies Sold
1st
  • Released: March 12, 2003
  • First Week Sales:
  • Chart Run: 20 weeks
  • Certification:
89 -
Track listing
23,389

Singles[]

  • Ameagari (雨上がり) (21 May 2003) {#43 Oricon}
  • Denwa (電話) (20 August 2003) {#29 Oricon}
  • Sangatsu kokonoka (3月9日) (9 March 2004) {#11 Oricon}
  • Akashia (アカシア) (19 May 2004) {#17 Oricon}
  • Moratorium (モラトリアム) (12 January 2005) {#8 Oricon}
  • Minami kaze (南風) (9 February 2005) {#9 Oricon}
  • Ao no sekai (蒼の世界) (12 October 2005) {#2 Oricon}
  • Konayuki (粉雪) (16 November 2005) {#2 Oricon}
  • Taiyō no shita (太陽の下) (1 March 2006) {#2 Oricon}
  • Akanezora (茜空) (14 March 2007) {#3 Oricon}
  • Hotaru ()/RUN (9 May 2007) {#4 Oricon}
  • Wonderful & Beautiful (12 December 2007) {#3 Oricon}
  • Motto Tooku E (30 July 2008) {#6 Oricon}
  • Yume no Tsubomi (7 January 2009) {#3 Oricon}
  • Starting Over (15 July 2009) {#4 Oricon}
  • Koi no Yokan Kara (恋の予感から) (25 November 2009) {#10 Oricon}
  • Tatsun da joe (立つんだジョー) (28 July 2010) {#13 Oricon}

Digital singles[]

  • Sakura (14 February 2009)
  • Kachōfūgetsu (花鳥風月) (17 February 2010)
  • Your Song (19 January 2011)

External links[]

Retrieved from ""