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Fact (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese post-hardcore band, formed in December 1999 in Ibaraki Prefecture.. The members have hidden their faces during every video since 2009 wearing traditional Japanese Noh masks during the time they supported their second album, Fact (2009), but abandoned the imagery in videos the next year [clarification needed] in favor of either partially or fully ...
Fact is the second album by Japanese post-hardcore band FACT, and their first on a major label. It is also their first worldwide release. The only single from the album was "A Fact of Life", for which a music video was made. [6] On the Japanese version of the album, the track "A Fact of Life (Boom Boom Satellites Remix)" does not appear.
Japanese folk songs (min'yō) can be grouped and classified in many ways but it is often convenient to think of five main categories: fisherman's work song, farmer's work song; lullaby; religious songs (such as sato kagura, a form of Shintoist music) songs used for gatherings such as weddings, funerals, and festivals (matsuri, especially Obon)
That same year, Boom Boom Satellites released a remix for Fact's song "A Fact of Life" on the eponymous album. In January 2010, Boom Boom Satellites released their first compilation album 19972007. The band released a new studio album in Japan, To the Loveless, on May 26, 2010, which featured many tracks from the Back on My Feet EP.
Lisa moved to the Sacra Music record label under Sony Music Entertainment Japan in April 2017. [43] She released her fourth studio album Little Devil Parade on May 24, 2017. [44] She held a two-day concert at the Saitama Super Arena on June 24 and 25, 2017. [45] She released her single "Datte Atashi no Hero." (だってアタシのヒーロー ...
The band has faced some criticism from people in Japan who disapproved of using Japanese instruments outside of traditional music. In a 1998 interview in Japan, June Kuramoto initially cried when ...
Lamp (Hepburn: ランプ) is a Japanese indie pop band formed in 2000 composing of guitarist Taiyo Someya, and vocalists Yusuke Nagai and Kaori Sakakibara. A shared interest in 1960's American and British music inspired the trio to co-write songs together.
They associate the flag with Japan's wartime atrocities and imperialist tendencies. Some countries, like South Korea, even asked the Tokyo 2020 Olympics organizers to ban it.