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B'z

B'z (Japanese: ビーズ, Hepburn: Bīzu) are a Japanese rock duo, consisting of guitarist, composer and producer Takahiro "Tak" Matsumoto and vocalist and lyricist Koshi Inaba,[2][3] known for their energetic hard rock tracks and pop rock ballads.[1] B'z is one of the best-selling music artists in the world and the best-selling in their native Japan, having released 49 consecutive No. 1 singles, 25 No. 1 albums, and 3 No. 1 EPs on the Oricon music charts, and have sold more than 100 million records worldwide.[4][5][6][7][8]

B'z
Koshi Inaba (left) and Takahiro Matsumoto (right) performing in 2012, New York City
Background information
OriginJapan
Genres
Years active1988–present
LabelsBertelsmannBMG Japan (1988–1995)
Being Inc.Vermillion (1995–present)
MembersTak Matsumoto
Koshi Inaba
WebsiteOfficial website

In 2003, HMV Japan ranked them at number 30 on their list of the 100 most important Japanese pop acts.[9] In 2007, B'z became the first music act from Asia to have their handprints and signatures put up on Hollywood's RockWalk.[10] In 2008, they were awarded a Guinness World Record for "Best selling album act in Japan", which also notes them to be the best selling act in Japan overall.[11]

History

Early works (1988–1990)

 
B'z band logo

In the late 1980s, Tak Matsumoto had been extremely busy as a guitarist with various recording sessions and live performances, including for Tetsuya Komuro's TM Network and Mari Hamada.[9][1] On May 21, 1988, Matsumoto released his first solo album, Thousand Wave, with positive critical reception.[1] However, wanting to start a band, he searched for band members, particularly a singer.[9][12] Eventually, through his management, he listened to the demo tape of vocalist Koshi Inaba in 1988, who would later form B'z with him.[1][12] At the first session, they played The Beatles' "Let It Be" and "Oh! Darling".[9] At the time, Japan's music scene was experiencing a band boom. With all the digital sounds in mainstream music,[9] the only sounds that Inaba and Matsumoto felt could not be expressed and replicated were the guitar and the human voice. As a result, they decided to keep it a two-man unit. On September 21, 1988, B'z made their debut with their first album, B'z, and single, "Dakara Sono Te o Hanashite".[9] Their music was very much a product of its times, with synthesizers and samplers sharing equal time with Matsumoto's guitar, producing an experimental sound, very different from their later well-known hard rock sound.[9]

Instead of immediately performing live after a debut album as many Japanese bands were doing, B'z had a clear vision of how they wanted to perform and decided to wait until they had enough material to play live.[1] The two concentrated on recording, improving the quality of their music. Their efforts resulted in a second album, Off the Lock, released on May 21, 1989.[9] With this second album came their first series of live performances, known better to their fans as "Live-Gym".[1] "B'z Live-Gym #00" started in Nagoya, continued in Osaka, and finished in Tokyo. Tickets were sold out on the day they became available. On October 21, their first mini-album (EP), Bad Communication, was released.[9] The title track is a blend of rock and dance music and is still a classic played during their "Live-Gyms". It charted for 163 weeks on the Oricon Charts.[13] Their first nationwide tour, "B'z Live-Gym #001 'Off the Lock'", covered 16 shows around Japan.

On February 21, 1990, their third album, Break Through, was released.[9] It charted at No. 3 on the Oricon Albums Chart. To promote it, they started a tour with 22 shows nationwide. Their single "Taiyō no Komachi Angel" was released on June 13 and peaked at No. 1 on the Oricon Singles Chart; this started a trend of every single released since then debuting at No. 1 on the Oricon Singles Chart.[1] Shortly after, Wicked Beat, their second mini album, was released on June 21. It also reached No. 3 on the charts. Like the band's other releases, it became commercially successful (reaching one million certifications) retroactively between 1990 and 1991.[9] Their fourth album, Risky, was released on November 7 and was their first album to top the charts. It was the beginning of a steady shift in the duo's style from pop rock to 80's hard rock.[1] The "B'z Live-Gym '90~'91 'Risky'" tour, with 49 performances, also started in November. Their first music video compilation, Film Risky, was recorded in New York City and London in four weeks and was released on December 16. With a barrage of releases, 1990 came to be the busiest year for B'z.

Transitioning into hard rock (1991–1992)

Their third mini album, Mars, was released on May 29, 1991; little promotion was done for it.[9] After releasing only two singles, B'z released their fifth album, In the Life, on November 27.[9] The release of the album marked B'z shying away from their advanced digital sounds and more towards rock.[1] Their first live video, "Just Another Life", was out on December 11. For promotion, B'z also embarked on their "B'z Live-Gym '91~'92 'In the Life'" tour, with 66 performances in total. The tour started in December and managed to flow into the next year. The total number of "Live-Gyms" they did during that year exceeded 100.

In the summer of 1992, the "B'z Pleasure '92 'Time'" tour took place with 12 performances in 3 major cities. The arena-class tour had amazing features such as a huge lighting set, called the "Starfish", and seats that rotated 360 degrees. October 28 marked the release of their sixth album, Run,[9] and proved to be even more hard rock oriented than their previous albums.[1] On December 9, they released a slightly different mini-album, Friends. Different from Run, its concept is somewhat similar to that of a movie soundtrack.

Switching to blues (1993–1994)

In early 1993, the Run tour concluded after 49 performances in 21 locations. In March, B'z released their twelfth and best-selling single, "Ai no mama ni Wagamama ni Boku wa Kimi dake o Kizutsukenai", which was certified double-million by the RIAJ in 2003.[13] They then held an open-air concert for the first time, called "B'z Live-Gym Pleasure '93 'Jap the Ripper'". The shows took place at Bentenjima in Hamamatsu-city, Shizuoka on July 31 and August 1. The successful event gathered fifty thousand people per day, totaling 100,000 people in the end. Following this, B'z concentrated on recording once again, which resulted in a lot of material. On February 9, 1994, the "B'z Live-Gym '94 'The 9th Blues'" tour started. The tour became their longest and biggest tour thus far, managing 87 performances in a year. During the tour, their seventh and only double album, The 7th Blues, was released on March 2. The album title not only came from it being their seventh album but also after the seventh chord that is frequently used in blues. Becoming much more "bluesier" and soulful, this album evidently shows their lean towards blues.[9][1] The album was made as kind of a "fan trap," as they wanted to "weed out" casual and non-rock fans from their fanbase as they shifted more towards rock.[1] It included the hit single "Don't Leave Me" and a bluesy re-recording of "Lady Navigation".[9] "The 9th Blues" tour finished at the Tsukisamu Green Dome in Sapporo on December 24.

Adopting pop and temporary hiatus (1995–1998)

In the first half of 1995, B'z spent their time recording, and after creating numerous demos, they held the "B'z Pleasure '95 'Buzz'" stadium tour with 12 shows in 7 cities. Their eighth album, Loose, was released on November 22. Loose was concentrated on the original concept of a two-man band. While combining rock with pop, this album is well-balanced with a variety of sounds. The album sold over 3 million copies, making it their best selling album at the time.[9][1] The "B'z Live-Gym '96 'Spirit Loose'" tour started on March 15, 1996, and held 44 performances in 21 locations. The show opened with a short B'z action movie shot in Los Angeles. A short while afterward, B'z released their 6th mini-album, titled Friends II, on November 25. Much like Friends before it, the album displayed more of an adult-oriented rock.

During a short hiatus in 1997, Inaba released his debut solo album, Magma, on which he wrote all the music and lyrics. The album, which topped the Oricon charts,[9] showcased another side of him, different from that of his usual image in B'z.[1] In March, the dome tour "B'z Live-Gym Pleasure '97 'Fireball'" consisted of 9 performances in 5 locations. Tickets for each dome, which have a capacity of about 30 to 50 thousand people each, were all sold out. The tour included stops at Tokyo (3 nights), Nagoya, Osaka, Fukuoka, and Maebashi, all being successful. On November 19, their ninth studio album, Survive, showcased yet another new direction in sound and style.[9] B'z's first promotional effort for the album included performances in concert halls in Akita, Hakodate, Kōchi, Shiga, and Nagasaki, before plunging into the main tour, "B'z Live-Gym '98 'Survive'", which started on January 24, 1998. On May 20, B'z released their first official compilation album, B'z The Best "Pleasure", which also marked their 10th year since debuting. Every song included in this album was a huge hit and was highly acclaimed as it was the first Japanese album to sell more than 5 million copies, which was achieved by the end of the year.[9][14] On June 6, the "Survive" tour successfully ended. In mid-1998, B'z entered a period of both rest and recording. During that period, on September 20, their second best-of album, B'z The Best "Treasure" was released, selling almost 4.5 million copies by the end of the year.[9]

Returning to the music scene (1999–2000)

B'z started off 1999 by busily promoting their recent singles and their tenth studio album, Brotherhood, which was released on July 14. It is considered their heaviest rock album up to that point.[9] The album's track "Giri Giri Chop (Version 51)" was recorded with drummer Pat Torpey and bassist Billy Sheehan, both from Mr. Big. In July, another dome-class tour, "B'z Live-Gym '99 'Brotherhood'" began in Sapporo and included 14 performances in 7 locations. They did away with extra stage acts and concentrated on their musical performance, playing songs from the new album and many hits from the past. On August 28 and 29, they played at Yokohama International Stadium, which were the first music concerts held in that stadium and gathered a total of 140,000 people over the two days. Although the second day at Yokohama experienced heavy rain, the tour ended successfully. Shortly afterward, B'z started recording again and continued to do so throughout the rest of the year without rest.

On February 23, 2000, they released the album B'z The "Mixture", which included remastered tracks of past songs, B-sides, remixes, re-recordings, and a new song.[9] In the middle of May, they started rehearsal for the summer tour "B'z Live-Gym Pleasure 2000 'Juice'", with warmup shows starting in a hall-class venue in Toyama on May 30. The tour totaled 18 shows in 10 cities, starting with a performance at the famous Nippon Budokan on June 20. Their single "Juice", which featured drummer Brian Tichy,[9] was released on July 12 and set a Japanese record of marking No. 1 in the first week, making it their 25th No. 1 single in sequence. A live video, Once Upon a Time in Yokohama: B'z Live Gym'99 "Brotherhood" was released on August 2. On December 6, they released their eleventh album, Eleven.[9] B'z finished off 2000 with an appearance on the TV show Music Station Special and would start rehearsal for their next tour.

Induction into Hollywood's RockWalk (2001–2007)

On February 26, 2001, "B'z Live-Gym 2001 'Eleven'" kicked off with a warmup show at the Ehime Kenmin Bunka Kaikan, which was exclusive to fan club members. The tour had 46 shows in 19 locations and 600,000 attendees. In March, they released their thirty-first and very popular single, "Ultra Soul".[9] After the Okinawa shows on June 27 and 28, B'z traveled abroad. They officially released their CDs in Taiwan and Hong Kong, and after finishing up the "Eleven" tour, B'z prepared for their first Asian tour, which included "B'z Live-Gym in Taipei 2001" and "B'z Live-Gym in Hong Kong 2001".[1]

While B'z started recording as soon as 2002 started, Tak finished two solo albums, Dragon From The West, which consists of hard rock tunes, and Hana, which includes more melodic and Asian-influenced tunes, which were released simultaneously. B'z finished their recording in the middle of May and started rehearsal in Tokyo for the Live-Gym tour that year, as well as performing with Aerosmith on the stage of FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan Official Concert International Day at Tokyo Stadium on June 27.[9][1] On July 3, their twelfth album, Green, was released.[9] The supporting tour, "B'z Live-Gym 2002 'Green ~Go★Fight★Win~'" began at Saitama Super Arena on July 8 and ended at Osaka Dome on September 9, encompassing 700,000 attendees, 14 shows, and 11 cities. The live band was rounded out by bassist Billy Sheehan and Canadian drummer Shane Gaalaas.[1] In September, after the last show in Osaka, B'z had their first US tour, "B'z Live-Gym 2002 'Rock n' California Roll'", starting in San Diego at Canes Bar & Grill on September 22 and The Palace in Los Angeles on September 24. On November 27, a live video, A Beautiful Reel, was released, which packaged everything that happened on the "Green" tour, as well as a second disc containing material from "Rock n' California Roll". On December 11, their first ballad compilation album, The Ballads ~Love & B'z~, was released.[9]

2003 marked their 15th anniversary,[9] and the two started recording at the beginning of the year, traveling to the United States in February for additional recording. Along with continuous releases, the tour "B'z Live-Gym The Final Pleasure 'It's Showtime!!'" started in July. This was intended as the final "Pleasure" tour, a series of tours focusing on less popular songs, which started in 1991. The tour kicked off on July 3 at Hakodate Shimin Kaikan and finished at Nagisa-en on September 21, which just so happened to be the day of their debut, having a total of 23 shows altogether. Since it had been 10 years since B'z performed at Nagisa-en during "B'z Live-Gym Pleasure '93 'Jap the Ripper'" in 1993, it gathered 100,000 audiences over two days. Even though the shows were hit by a typhoon and it rained very hard, they still managed to attract thousands of attendees.

After the Nagisa-en performance, B'z flew back to the US. The tour "B'z Live-Gym 2003 'Banzai in North America'" included 7 shows, including stops at Las Vegas, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, and Vancouver. Their thirteenth album, Big Machine, was released on September 17. When they flew back to Japan, B'z started their third tour in 2003, "B'z Live-Gym 2003 'Big Machine'". It was a dome tour in 6 locations, from Saitama Super Arena to Tokyo Dome in December. Tak Matsumoto's cover album, The Hit Parade, with various vocalists, including Inaba, was released on November 26.

Kicking off 2004, B'z went back to the studio to begin recording again. On February 25, a DVD, Typhoon No.15 ~B'z Live-Gym The Final Pleasure "It's Showtime!!" in Nagisaen~, was released. For the rest of the year, they worked mainly on their solo projects. Soon after finishing each solo tour, they began recording together again. On April 6, 2005, B'z released their fourteenth album, The Circle. For the album's recording, the duo was particularly worried about its live sound. For promotional activities, B'z started the tour "B'z Live-Gym 2005 'Circle of Rock'" that ran from April to September, totaling 27 shows in 41 locations. On August 1, the compilation The Complete B'z was digitally released only for the Japanese iTunes Store in order to promote the iTunes Store in Japan, which included a Japanese cover of Maroon 5's "This Love" as a bonus. Matsumoto's House of Strings label, which he established a year before, released its second album, Theatre of Strings, on October 19. On November 30, B'z The Best "Pleasure II", their third compilation album, was released, reaching one million sales by the end of 2005. On June 28, 2006, their fifteenth album, Monster, was released. Most of the recording took place in Los Angeles. B'z kicked off the tour "B'z Live-Gym 2006 'Monster's Garage'" at the Amami Bunka Center on July 2, having 17 shows in all, including 5 big domes in 11 locations and 450,000 audience members altogether.

On November 19, 2007, B'z was inducted into Hollywood's RockWalk as the first Asian inductee in Sunset Boulevard, California, United States. They were recommended by Steve Vai, whom they collaborated with in 1999 on the track "Asian Sky" from his album The Ultra Zone, as well as supported him during his 2007 tour in Japan.[1][12] Shortly after, on December 5, B’z released their sixteenth album, Action. The drum parts for the two singles from Action, "Eien no Tsubasa" and "Super Love Song", were recorded by drummers Josh Freese and Jeremy Colson respectively.

20th anniversary (2008–2009)

In February 2008, B'z released a DVD titled B'z Live in Nanba. The show was recorded in 2006 and was also broadcast online. The concert featured songs from The Circle and Monster eras, along with a number of older hits as well as several English versions. On April 16, 2008, the band released their forty-fifth single, "Burn -Fumetsu no Face-", which became their forty-first consecutive No. 1 single. The year also marked the twentieth anniversary of the band. To commemorate the occasion, the "B'z 20" campaign was launched that saw two further compilation albums: B'z The Best "Ultra Pleasure" was released on June 18, 2008, and featured the greatest of the band's hits on a two-disc collection in chronological order, along with two all-new modern recordings of older tracks, while B'z The Best "Ultra Treasure" was released on September 17, 2008, whose two-disc track listing was decided by fans who were invited to vote for three songs of their choice at the B'z 20th anniversary website, which featured an exclusive song on a three-disc gift bundle, as well as a re-recording and a remix.

On January 25, 2008, B'z performed "B'z Showcase 2008 -Kiyotake Action-", a performance in their "Showcase" series of tours, which are generally small-venue performances of older album songs and more obscure B-sides that are mostly unsuitable for the larger arena concerts. Following this, B'z immediately embarked on the eight-month "B'z Live-Gym 2008 'Action'" tour, which saw them perform all over Japan. Afterward, they segued into "B'z Live-Gym Pleasure 2008 -Glory Days-", their first "Pleasure" tour since 2003. Throughout the month of September, B'z performed for hundreds of thousands of fans in nine performances across three cities. The special tour ended on September 21 at Nissan Stadium, with a concert on the 20th anniversary of their first release. This performance was later released on DVD on February 25, 2009, as B'z Live-Gym Pleasure 2008 -Glory Days-.

 
A billboard advertising the album Magic in Shibuya Crossing, 2009

Following their massive tour in 2008, B'z returned to the studio to record new material. Their first release of the year was a Double A-side single, "Ichibu to Zenbu/Dive", released on August 5, 2009, which featured drummer Chad Smith.[15] The non-full-track ringtone downloads (Chaku Uta) of "Ichibu to Zenbu" began on July 13, 2009, and the full-track ringtone downloads (Chaku Uta Full) of the song began on August 26, 2009.[16] Because of its strong download sales in August and September on Recochoku, the song won the "Monthly Recochoku Award, Best Song Award Grand Prix" for Chaku Uta and Chaku Uta Full each for two consecutive months.[17] On October 13, 2009, KDDI also announced that "Ichibu to Zenbu" was awarded the "Utatomo Award" of September 2009 for the sales on "Utatomo" via au's LISMO.[18] The second release was the single "My Lonely Town", released on October 14, 2009.[19] Both singles are featured in the band's next studio album, Magic, released on November 18, 2009.[20] On December 10, 2009, it was announced that their single "Ichibu to Zenbu/Dive" won the "Hot 100 of the Year" award at the Billboard Japan Music Awards.[21]

30th anniversary (2010–present)

After the "B'z Live-Gym 2010 'Ain't No Magic'" tour, Inaba and Matsumoto worked on solo activities and did not release any single as a duo in 2010. Matsumoto released the album Take Your Pick with Larry Carlton on June 2, 2010, which later won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Album at the 53rd Grammy Awards on February 13, 2011.[22] Inaba's fourth solo studio album, Hadou, was also released on August 18, 2010, debuting at number one on the Oricon album charts.

In 2011, they came back as B'z with their forty-eighth single, "Sayonara Kizu Darake no Hibi yo", which was written for and used as a commercial song for Pepsi NEX. They released their eighteenth studio album, C'mon, on July 27, 2011, which also featured their forty-ninth single, "Don't Wanna Lie", which was used as the ending theme in Detective Conan: Quarter of Silence. In the summer of 2011, B'z embarked on their third North American tour, "B'z Live-Gym 2011 -Long Time No See-", which featured shows in Vancouver, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.[23] On May 4, 2012, they released two singles: "Into Free-Dangan-", an English re-recording of "Samayoeru Aoi Dangan", which was used as the theme song for the video game Dragon's Dogma, and their fiftieth single, "Go for It, Baby (Kioku no Sanmyaku)".[24] "Into Free" was later revealed as the lead single for their new English EP, titled B'z,[25] which featured English re-recordings of "Ai no Bakudan", "Splash", "Juice", and "Ultra Soul".[26][24] The songs were co-selected and co-written with their drummer, Shane Gaalaas.[12] The EP was released internationally through the iTunes Store and was released on July 25, 2012.[26] To support the EP, B'z embarked on their fourth North American tour, titled "B'z Live-Gym 2012 -Into Free-", which included stops in San Francisco, Seattle, Vancouver, Toronto, Silver Spring, New York City, and Los Angeles.[12] In an interview, Matsumoto explained, "This will be our fourth US tour. We love playing for American audiences and are excited to share our first English-language release with our fans."[26] The tour ended at the Universal Amphitheatre, which almost sold out.[27]

In 2013, the group was the third highest-earning artist by total sales revenue in Japan with ¥5.379 billion.[28] In 2015, they released their nineteenth studio album, Epic Day,[29] as well the singles "Uchōten" and "Red".[30] In August 2017, the band released B'z Complete Single Box Set, and although being a high-priced limited edition, it managed to chart in the Top 10.[31] B'z released their fifty-third single, "Seimei/Still Alive", in June, which was their forty-ninth single to top the Oricon charts.[32] Their twentieth studio album, Dinosaur, was released in November 2017, which was their twenty-eighth album to top the Oricon Albums Chart.[33] To commemorate their 30th anniversary in 2018, they held a large exhibition between April and June at the Yūrakuchō Infos building in Tokyo's Chiyoda ward,[8][34] their music documentary B'z 30th Year Exhibition "Scenes" 1988-2018 was screened in theatres nationwide,[35] all 20 studio albums released up to that point were mastered for release as LPs,[36] a commemorative book, B'z The Chronicle, was released,[37] and a new "Pleasure" tour, "B'z Live-Gym Pleasure 2018 -Hinotori-", was held. In July, they released the video B'z Live-Gym 2017-2018 "Live Dinosaur", which topped both DVD and Blu-ray charts, selling over 90 thousand copies in the first week.[38] Their new track, "Tsuwamono, Hashiru", was used for TV commercials for the 2019 Rugby World Cup, which was held in Japan.[39]

On April 10, 2019, the band announced their long-awaited follow-up to Dinosaur, New Love. The album was released on May 29, 2019, and featured new backing band members who made their debut on that year's "B'z Live Gym 2019 -Whole Lotta New Love-" tour, as well as a guest appearance by Aerosmith's Joe Perry.

During the 2020 pandemic, B'z made their entire Live-Gym catalog available to watch on YouTube for free, including their most recent one, "Whole Lotta New Love".

B'z covered "Sexual Violet No. 1" by Masahiro Kuwana for 2021's Take Me to Kazemachi!, a tribute album to the song's lyricist, Takashi Matsumoto.[40]

On May 21, 2021, the majority of the B'z catalog was made available on online music services such as Spotify and Apple Music worldwide, including, for the first time, the United States. Previously, only the band's 2007 and 2012 self-titled EPs were available on Apple Music in the US, but currently only the latter is available.[41] A new song was also released, titled "Kimi to Nara". Later, on December 8, they released their first mini-album in 25 years, Friends III.[42]

On August 10, 2022, B'z released their twenty-second album, Highway X.[43]

Music style

The band's music is composed by guitarist Tak Matsumoto, while the lyrics are written by vocalist Koshi Inaba.[9][44] The band has experimented with its style, "going from dance-rock to hard rock to blues to J-pop and back," according to AllMusic.[1] They have also been described as an "ultra-commercial blend of hard rock, blues, and synthesizer pop."[45] Despite frequent changes in musical style during their first 13 years, they didn't lose any support.[9] In a review of their best-selling album, B'z The Best "Ultra Pleasure", Adam Greenberg of AllMusic notes that they "had some criticism as being more of a pop band with a rock tinge than a full-fledged rock band", but throughout their career, they've shown strong rock elements including "'80s-styled extended electric guitar solo" and "blues-based rock" with various Western rock influences combined with their distinctive style.[46] Compared to two other big Japanese rock bands, Mr. Children and Glay, the sound of the former can be described as "soft", while the latter is "fast and rocking", which is more comparable to B'z.[47] On Magic, for example, they have combined "happy-go-lucky moods and hard rock aesthetics", but instead of sounding like Western glam metal, it's more similar to a visual kei sound, indicating their influence on that movement and bands like L'Arc-en-Ciel.[48] Greenberg, in a review of "Ichibu to Zenbu/Dive", argued that most of their work has a "somewhat disjointed structure", "creative vocal descents and cascades", and "riff-heavy guitars".[49] Marty Friedman compared them to Aerosmith, but stated to prefer B'z because of Inaba's type of voice and high vocal technique, and Matsumoto's personality while playing the guitar solo.[50] Matsumoto's guitar skills have been praised as the "top guitar master in Asia", with "fretboard histrionics" and a "great sense of riff".[48]

Influence and legacy

It is considered that Matsumoto's guitar style has been influenced by the hard rock sound of Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple, while Inaba, who was interested in rock music since elementary school, listened to Queen, Loudness, Aerosmith, and others.[9]

In 2003, HMV Japan ranked the band at number 30 on their list of the 100 most important Japanese pop acts.[9] In 2007, B'z became the first music act from Asia to have their handprints and signatures put up on Hollywood's RockWalk.[10] According to AllMusic, they are considered the "biggest rock act in Japan and the entirety of Asia",[1] while the popular music historian Norman Abjorensen described them as one of the most notable J-pop music acts who have achieved Asian and global fame.[44]

Matsumoto, through his B'z fame, is also credited for a "resurrection and reinvention of the Japanese guitar hero", alongside, and in comparison to, X Japan's guitarist Hide for a model of guitarist more interested in technique, technology, and equipment, popularizing the electric guitar as a mass media product in Japan.[45] He also has numerous Gibson signature models, with the first one being released in 1999.[45]

In Oricon's yearly poll of 20,000 people for "Favorite Artist Ranking", which started in 2004, they were regularly placed among the most popular music artists, even in more recent years being ranked at number 4 (2015, 2016, 2017).[51][52][53] In 2015, in a survey by Oricon about peoples' favorite song to relieve stress, their song "Ultra Soul" was ranked second.[54]

Awards and achievements

In 2015, B'z had 35,809,000 reported certified single sales, for which they held the first place until December 2015.[55] In 2017, they had 46,576,000 reported certified album sales, for which they still hold the first place. With joint sales of more than 82 million certified records, they are ranked as the best-selling music act in Japan.[7] In 2008, for their 20th anniversary, they were awarded a Guinness World Record for "Best selling album act in Japan", which also notes them to be the best selling act in Japan overall.[11]

They have 25 Platinum and 31 Million physical album certifications, 9 Gold, 33 Platinum, and 20 Million physical single certifications, and 11 Gold physical home video certifications by the Recording Industry Association of Japan. The compilation album B'z The Best "Pleasure" was the first Japanese album to sell more than 5 million copies and was the best-selling album in Japan at the time, which has achieved by the end of 1998, but it was surpassed by Hikaru Utada's First Love shortly after in 1999.[9]

Other sales records held by B'z include "the most number one singles (49), most consecutive number one singles (49), longest streak of number one singles (49), total weeks singles were at number one (66), longest consecutive period with a single at number one (20 Years), most singles in the top 10 concurrently (9), the most million-selling albums (19), most number-one albums (26), and the only artist in history to lead all six major categories tracked by Oricon" among others, including total CD shipments of over 100 million copies.[56] During the week of April 12, 2003, they held eleven positions in the top twelve on the Oricon Singles Chart, except for the second position.[57]

In 1999, at the World Music Awards, they won the award for "World's Best Selling Japanese Artist of the Year". At the WMA, they've received several nominations, including "World's Best Live Act" and "World's Best Group" in 2013.[58]

Years Japanese awards
1990
1991
1992
1993
  • Japan Gold Disc Award - Best 5 Artists Award, Best 5 Singles Award ("Blowin'")[65]
1994
1995
1996
  • Japan Gold Disc Award - Best 5 Artists Award, Grand Prix Album Award (Loose), Folk Rock Award (Loose), Best Home Video Award ("Buzz!!" The Movie)[68]
1998
  • Japan Gold Disc Award - Rock Album of the Year Award (Survive)[69]
1999
2000
2001
2002
2004
  • Japan Gold Disc Award - Rock & Pop Album of the Year Award (Big Machine)[74]
2005
2006
2009
2010
2014

Discography

Bibliography

  • Brotherhood
  • Eleven
  • Survive
  • B'z The Best "Pleasure"
  • B'z The Best "Treasure"
  • B'z The "Mixture"
  • Green
  • 西辺来龍 – Dragon From The West
  • Live -on- 1988~2003
  • Big Machine
  • The Circle
  • B'z The Best "Pleasure II"
  • Monster

Tours

  • Live-Gym No. 00 (1989)
  • Live-Gym No. 001 "Off the Lock" (1989)
  • Live-Gym "Bad Club-Gym" (1989)
  • Live-Gym "Break Through" (1990)
  • Live-Gym '90~'91 "Risky"
  • Live-Gym "Pleasure '91"
  • Live-Gym '91~'92 "In the Life"
  • Live-Gym Pleasure '92 "Time"
  • Live-Gym '93 "Run"
  • Live-Gym Pleasure '93 "Jap the Ripper"
  • Live-Gym '94 "The 9th Blues" Part 1
  • Live-Gym '94 "The 9th Blues" Part 2
  • Live-Gym Pleasure '95 "Buzz!!"
  • Live-Gym '96 "Spirit Loose"
  • Live-Gym Pleasure '97 "Fireball"
  • Live-Gym '98 "Survive"
  • Live-Gym '99 "Brotherhood"
  • Live-Gym Pleasure 2000 "Juice"
  • Live-Gym 2001 "Eleven"
  • Live-Gym in Taipei 2001 / Live-Gym in Hong Kong 2001
  • Live-Gym 2002 "Green ~Go★Fight★Win~"
  • Live-Gym 2002 "Rock n' California Roll"
    • 22 September – Canes Bar & Grill: California
    • 24 September – The Palace: California
  • Live-Gym 2003 The Final Pleasure "It's Showtime!!"
  • Live-Gym 2003 Banzai in North America
    • 12 October – House of Blues: Las Vegas, Nevada
    • 14 October – House of Blues: Los Angeles, California
    • 15 October – House of Blues: Los Angeles, California
    • 18 October – The Fillmore: San Francisco, California
    • 19 October – The Fillmore: San Francisco, California
    • 21 October – The Showbox: Seattle
    • 23 October – Commodore Ballroom: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • Live-Gym 2003 "Big Machine"
  • Live-Gym 2005 "Circle of Rock"
  • Live-Gym 2006 "Monster's Garage"
  • B'z Showcase 2007
    • The showcase 2007 is an unofficial tour. They visited a few cities (3 to 5) and played to small audiences. They played a lot of their old songs. Many of them were rarely played live, including their new English song that was used in Burnout Dominator's soundtrack, "Friction".
  • Live-Gym 2008 "Action" – Nagasaki Brick Hall
  • Live-Gym Pleasure 2008 -Glory Days-
  • Live-Gym 2010 "Ain't No Magic"
  • Live-Gym 2011 -Long Time No See-
  • Live-Gym 2011 -C'mon-
  • Live-Gym 2012 -Into Free-
    • 17 September – The Warfield: San Francisco, California
    • 19 September – The Showbox SODO: Seattle, Washington
    • 20 September – Orpheum Theatre: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
    • 26 September – Sound Academy: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • 28 September – The Fillmore: Silver Spring, Maryland
    • 30 September – Best Buy Theater: New York
    • 7 October – Gibson Amphitheatre: Los Angeles, California
  • Live-Gym 2012 -Into Free Extra-
  • Live-Gym Pleasure 2013 -Endless Summer-
  • Live-Gym 2015 "Epic Night"
  • B'z Showcase 2017 "B'z In Your Town"
  • Live-Gym 2017-2018 "Live Dinosaur"
  • Live-Gym Pleasure 2018 -Hinotori-
  • Live-Gym 2019 -Whole Lotta NEW LOVE-
  • B'z SHOWCASE 2020 -5 ERAS 8820- Day1〜5
  • B'z presents UNITE #01 with Mr.Children and Glay
  • B’z presents Live Friends
  • Live-Gym 2022 -Highway X-
  • Live-Gym Pleasure 2023 - STARS -

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "B'z biography". AllMusic. stylistic wanderings, in which they have indulged a lot, going from dance-rock to hard rock to blues to J-pop and back
  2. ^ 佐伯明『B'z ウルトラクロニクル』ソニー・マガジンズ、2003年。ISBN 4-7897-2101-9
  3. ^ 新型光「B'zはなぜこれほど売れるのか ちょっと真面目に考えてみた 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine」 R25、2005年12月15日。(参照:2007年5月1日。)
  4. ^ Culross, Mikey Hirano (October 11, 2017). "Meeting of the Masters". Rafu Shimpo. Retrieved December 1, 2017.
  5. ^ "B'z got their 22nd No. 1 album, ranked No.1 in history and dominates all the 6 main ranking sections" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2008-06-24. from the original on 16 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-14.
  6. ^ "B'z、前人未到のシングル・アルバム通算8000万枚突破" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2011-08-02. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
  7. ^ a b "B'z、通算28作目のアルバム首位 歴代1位記録を更新" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2017-12-05. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
  8. ^ a b "B'z celebrate 30 years in music business with Tokyo exhibition". Asahi Shimbun. 2018-04-23. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai "Top 100 Japanese pops Artists – No.30". HMV Japan (in Japanese). 2003-11-01. Retrieved 2013-01-15.
  10. ^ a b "Duo B'z enters L.A. Rockwalk". The Japan Times. 2007-11-21. Retrieved 2008-11-14.
  11. ^ a b "Best selling album act in Japan". Guinness World Records. 12 March 2008. Retrieved 21 November 2018. The best selling album act in Japan is a hard rock duo B'z (Japan) who has sold more than 42 million albums by 2008. They have also sold more than 34 million singles which makes them the best selling music act in Japan overall
  12. ^ a b c d e "Interview with B'z". JaME World. 17 September 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  13. ^ a b "B'z、歴代No.1アーティストまでの軌跡!" (in Japanese). Oricon. 2006-05-25. from the original on 21 December 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-04.
  14. ^ ミスチル、シングル&アルバム総売上枚数5000万枚突破! (in Japanese). Oricon. 2007-03-19. from the original on 21 December 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-15.
  15. ^ ""Ichibutozenbu/DIVE" Announced". OffTheLock. 2009-06-17. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
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  17. ^ "レコチョクアワード月間最優秀楽曲賞2009年9月度を発表!~B'zの月9主題歌、2ヶ月連続「着うた(R)」「着うたフル(R)」制覇~" (in Japanese). Excite News. 2009-10-05. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  18. ^ "EZ「着うたフル®」9月によく聴かれた曲ランキング、「うたとも®Award」を発表" (in Japanese). KDDI. 2009-10-13. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  19. ^ My Lonely Town at cdjapan.co.jp
  20. ^ Magic at cdjapan.co.jp
  21. ^ a b (in Japanese). 47 News. 2009-12-10. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2009-12-12.
  22. ^ "B'z Matsumoto bags pop Grammy". The Japan Times. 2011-02-15. Retrieved 2011-04-17.
  23. ^ . Asia Pacific Arts. 2011-04-28. Archived from the original on 2013-09-23. Retrieved 2011-05-05.
  24. ^ a b "Interview: B'z - Into Free Tour". JrockRevolution.com. 20 October 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  25. ^ Merryl Lentz (28 August 2012). "Review of The B'z New Album - B'z". Screamer magazine. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  26. ^ a b c John Katic (7 September 2012). "Interview: Guitarist Tak Matsumoto of B'z Discusses the Band's First English-Language EP and His Signature Edition Gibson". Guitar World. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  27. ^ Robyn Weiss (10 October 2012). "B'z LIVE Review – Gibson Amphitheatre, Universal City, CA". Screamer magazine. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  28. ^ . tokyohive. 6Theory Media, LLC. December 16, 2013. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2015.
  29. ^ "B'z、アルバム27作目首位 歴代1位の通算首位・総売上枚数更新" (in Japanese). Oricon. 10 March 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  30. ^ "B'z、歴代最多の通算64週1位 2年9ヶ月ぶり再始動" (in Japanese). Oricon. 20 January 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  31. ^ "B'z、男性歌手史上最高額でアルバムTOP10" (in Japanese). Oricon. 5 September 2017. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  32. ^ "B'z、49作連続49作目首位 2年ぶりシングルで" (in Japanese). Oricon. 20 June 2017. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  33. ^ "B'z、通算28作目のアルバム首位 歴代1位記録を更新" (in Japanese). Oricon. 5 December 2017. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  34. ^ "【レポート】『B'z 30th Year Exhibition "SCENES" 1988-2018』の全貌" (in Japanese). Barks. 11 April 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  35. ^ "B'z、展覧会上映作品を全国映画館で 初公開の映像も追加" (in Japanese). Oricon. 15 May 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  36. ^ "B'z、オリジナルアルバム20作品を一挙LP化 デビュー30周年記念" (in Japanese). Oricon. 22 March 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  37. ^ "B'z、デビュー記念日に30周年記念本 300P超え『ザ・クロニクル』" (in Japanese). Oricon. 29 June 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  38. ^ "B'z最新ライブ映像、映像ランキング3冠" (in Japanese). Oricon. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  39. ^ "Japanese Rock Superduo B'z Hypes 2019 Rugby World Cup With New Song". Billboard. 5 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  40. ^ "B'z、松本隆トリビュートAL参加決定。桑名正博「セクシャルバイオレットNo.1」をカバー". Barks (in Japanese). 2021-06-15. Retrieved 2021-08-03.
  41. ^ "Every B'z Single & Album Now Streaming WORLDWIDE on Spotify & More! | OFF THE LOCK - Your Number 1 Source for B'z". 21 May 2021.
  42. ^ "B'z、コンセプトアルバム『FRIENDS III』収録詳細およびアートワーク公開". BARKS (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  43. ^ "B'z、22thフルアルバム『Highway X』を8月リリース". BARKS (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  44. ^ a b Abjorensen, Norman (2017). Historical Dictionary of Popular Music. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 23, 78, 262. ISBN 978-1-5381-0215-2.
  45. ^ a b c Freedman, Alisa; Slade, Toby (2018). Introducing Japanese Popular Culture. Taylor & Francis. pp. 144–145. ISBN 978-1-317-52893-7.
  46. ^ Adam Greenberg. "B'z the Best Ultra Pleasure Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  47. ^ Alexey Eremenko. "Action Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  48. ^ a b Alexey Eremenko. "Magic Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  49. ^ Adam Greenberg. "Ichibu to Zenbu/Dive Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  50. ^ Marty Friedman (20 October 2009). "イージーリスニングみたいなメロディーでもロックに聴かせるB'zの底力". Nikkei Trendy Net (in Japanese). Nikkei Business Publications. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  51. ^ "音楽ファン2万人が選ぶ 好きなアーティストランキング 2015" (in Japanese). Oricon. 22 October 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  52. ^ "第13回 音楽ファン2万人が選ぶ "好きなアーティストランキング" 2016" (in Japanese). Oricon. 14 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  53. ^ "第14回 音楽ファン2万人が選ぶ "好きなアーティストランキング" 2017" (in Japanese). Oricon. 7 December 2017. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  54. ^ "ストレス解消発散ソング1位はあの名曲 「思いっきり歌いたい」人が多数" (in Japanese). Oricon. 21 May 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  55. ^ "Total sales of AKB48 singles hit 36 million copies, a Japan record". The Japan Times. 2015-12-10. Retrieved 2018-11-20.
  56. ^ "Ten Years On: B'z as Guinness World Record Holders". Off The Lock, Vermillion Records. 24 May 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  57. ^ Fred Bronson (12 April 2003). "Cheart Beat: The B'z Kn'Zs". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. The Beatles may have owned the entire top five on the Hot 100 in April 1964, but that's nothing compared with the domination of this week's Japanese singles chart by the B'z. The duo, made up of Tak Matsumoto and Koshi Inaba, have locked up 11 of the top 12 positions. "It's Showtime" (Vermillion) debuts at No. 1. Except for a single by Smap at No. 2, the next 10 songs are all by the B'z.
  58. ^ "B'z Nominated At World Music Awards 2013". Off The Lock, Vermillion Records. 23 August 2013. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
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  69. ^ "The Japan Gold Disc Award 1998" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
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  73. ^ "The Japan Gold Disc Award 2002" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
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  75. ^ "The Japan Gold Disc Award 2005" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  76. ^ "The Japan Gold Disc Award 2006" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
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  78. ^ "The Japan Gold Disc Award 2010" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  79. ^ "The Japan Gold Disc Award 2014" (in Japanese). RIAJ. Retrieved 21 November 2018.
  • B'z biography at the official website

External links

  • B'z Official website

their, self, titled, debut, album, album, japanese, ビーズ, hepburn, bīzu, japanese, rock, consisting, guitarist, composer, producer, takahiro, matsumoto, vocalist, lyricist, koshi, inaba, known, their, energetic, hard, rock, tracks, rock, ballads, best, selling,. For their self titled debut album see B z album B z Japanese ビーズ Hepburn Bizu are a Japanese rock duo consisting of guitarist composer and producer Takahiro Tak Matsumoto and vocalist and lyricist Koshi Inaba 2 3 known for their energetic hard rock tracks and pop rock ballads 1 B z is one of the best selling music artists in the world and the best selling in their native Japan having released 49 consecutive No 1 singles 25 No 1 albums and 3 No 1 EPs on the Oricon music charts and have sold more than 100 million records worldwide 4 5 6 7 8 B zKoshi Inaba left and Takahiro Matsumoto right performing in 2012 New York CityBackground informationOriginJapanGenresHard rockpop rockblues rocknew waveJ pop 1 Years active1988 presentLabelsBertelsmann BMG Japan 1988 1995 Being Inc Vermillion 1995 present MembersTak MatsumotoKoshi InabaWebsiteOfficial websiteIn 2003 HMV Japan ranked them at number 30 on their list of the 100 most important Japanese pop acts 9 In 2007 B z became the first music act from Asia to have their handprints and signatures put up on Hollywood s RockWalk 10 In 2008 they were awarded a Guinness World Record for Best selling album act in Japan which also notes them to be the best selling act in Japan overall 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early works 1988 1990 1 2 Transitioning into hard rock 1991 1992 1 3 Switching to blues 1993 1994 1 4 Adopting pop and temporary hiatus 1995 1998 1 5 Returning to the music scene 1999 2000 1 6 Induction into Hollywood s RockWalk 2001 2007 1 7 20th anniversary 2008 2009 1 8 30th anniversary 2010 present 2 Music style 3 Influence and legacy 4 Awards and achievements 5 Discography 6 Bibliography 7 Tours 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditEarly works 1988 1990 Edit B z band logo In the late 1980s Tak Matsumoto had been extremely busy as a guitarist with various recording sessions and live performances including for Tetsuya Komuro s TM Network and Mari Hamada 9 1 On May 21 1988 Matsumoto released his first solo album Thousand Wave with positive critical reception 1 However wanting to start a band he searched for band members particularly a singer 9 12 Eventually through his management he listened to the demo tape of vocalist Koshi Inaba in 1988 who would later form B z with him 1 12 At the first session they played The Beatles Let It Be and Oh Darling 9 At the time Japan s music scene was experiencing a band boom With all the digital sounds in mainstream music 9 the only sounds that Inaba and Matsumoto felt could not be expressed and replicated were the guitar and the human voice As a result they decided to keep it a two man unit On September 21 1988 B z made their debut with their first album B z and single Dakara Sono Te o Hanashite 9 Their music was very much a product of its times with synthesizers and samplers sharing equal time with Matsumoto s guitar producing an experimental sound very different from their later well known hard rock sound 9 Instead of immediately performing live after a debut album as many Japanese bands were doing B z had a clear vision of how they wanted to perform and decided to wait until they had enough material to play live 1 The two concentrated on recording improving the quality of their music Their efforts resulted in a second album Off the Lock released on May 21 1989 9 With this second album came their first series of live performances known better to their fans as Live Gym 1 B z Live Gym 00 started in Nagoya continued in Osaka and finished in Tokyo Tickets were sold out on the day they became available On October 21 their first mini album EP Bad Communication was released 9 The title track is a blend of rock and dance music and is still a classic played during their Live Gyms It charted for 163 weeks on the Oricon Charts 13 Their first nationwide tour B z Live Gym 001 Off the Lock covered 16 shows around Japan On February 21 1990 their third album Break Through was released 9 It charted at No 3 on the Oricon Albums Chart To promote it they started a tour with 22 shows nationwide Their single Taiyō no Komachi Angel was released on June 13 and peaked at No 1 on the Oricon Singles Chart this started a trend of every single released since then debuting at No 1 on the Oricon Singles Chart 1 Shortly after Wicked Beat their second mini album was released on June 21 It also reached No 3 on the charts Like the band s other releases it became commercially successful reaching one million certifications retroactively between 1990 and 1991 9 Their fourth album Risky was released on November 7 and was their first album to top the charts It was the beginning of a steady shift in the duo s style from pop rock to 80 s hard rock 1 The B z Live Gym 90 91 Risky tour with 49 performances also started in November Their first music video compilation Film Risky was recorded in New York City and London in four weeks and was released on December 16 With a barrage of releases 1990 came to be the busiest year for B z Transitioning into hard rock 1991 1992 Edit Their third mini album Mars was released on May 29 1991 little promotion was done for it 9 After releasing only two singles B z released their fifth album In the Life on November 27 9 The release of the album marked B z shying away from their advanced digital sounds and more towards rock 1 Their first live video Just Another Life was out on December 11 For promotion B z also embarked on their B z Live Gym 91 92 In the Life tour with 66 performances in total The tour started in December and managed to flow into the next year The total number of Live Gyms they did during that year exceeded 100 In the summer of 1992 the B z Pleasure 92 Time tour took place with 12 performances in 3 major cities The arena class tour had amazing features such as a huge lighting set called the Starfish and seats that rotated 360 degrees October 28 marked the release of their sixth album Run 9 and proved to be even more hard rock oriented than their previous albums 1 On December 9 they released a slightly different mini album Friends Different from Run its concept is somewhat similar to that of a movie soundtrack Switching to blues 1993 1994 Edit In early 1993 the Run tour concluded after 49 performances in 21 locations In March B z released their twelfth and best selling single Ai no mama ni Wagamama ni Boku wa Kimi dake o Kizutsukenai which was certified double million by the RIAJ in 2003 13 They then held an open air concert for the first time called B z Live Gym Pleasure 93 Jap the Ripper The shows took place at Bentenjima in Hamamatsu city Shizuoka on July 31 and August 1 The successful event gathered fifty thousand people per day totaling 100 000 people in the end Following this B z concentrated on recording once again which resulted in a lot of material On February 9 1994 the B z Live Gym 94 The 9th Blues tour started The tour became their longest and biggest tour thus far managing 87 performances in a year During the tour their seventh and only double album The 7th Blues was released on March 2 The album title not only came from it being their seventh album but also after the seventh chord that is frequently used in blues Becoming much more bluesier and soulful this album evidently shows their lean towards blues 9 1 The album was made as kind of a fan trap as they wanted to weed out casual and non rock fans from their fanbase as they shifted more towards rock 1 It included the hit single Don t Leave Me and a bluesy re recording of Lady Navigation 9 The 9th Blues tour finished at the Tsukisamu Green Dome in Sapporo on December 24 Adopting pop and temporary hiatus 1995 1998 Edit In the first half of 1995 B z spent their time recording and after creating numerous demos they held the B z Pleasure 95 Buzz stadium tour with 12 shows in 7 cities Their eighth album Loose was released on November 22 Loose was concentrated on the original concept of a two man band While combining rock with pop this album is well balanced with a variety of sounds The album sold over 3 million copies making it their best selling album at the time 9 1 The B z Live Gym 96 Spirit Loose tour started on March 15 1996 and held 44 performances in 21 locations The show opened with a short B z action movie shot in Los Angeles A short while afterward B z released their 6th mini album titled Friends II on November 25 Much like Friends before it the album displayed more of an adult oriented rock During a short hiatus in 1997 Inaba released his debut solo album Magma on which he wrote all the music and lyrics The album which topped the Oricon charts 9 showcased another side of him different from that of his usual image in B z 1 In March the dome tour B z Live Gym Pleasure 97 Fireball consisted of 9 performances in 5 locations Tickets for each dome which have a capacity of about 30 to 50 thousand people each were all sold out The tour included stops at Tokyo 3 nights Nagoya Osaka Fukuoka and Maebashi all being successful On November 19 their ninth studio album Survive showcased yet another new direction in sound and style 9 B z s first promotional effort for the album included performances in concert halls in Akita Hakodate Kōchi Shiga and Nagasaki before plunging into the main tour B z Live Gym 98 Survive which started on January 24 1998 On May 20 B z released their first official compilation album B z The Best Pleasure which also marked their 10th year since debuting Every song included in this album was a huge hit and was highly acclaimed as it was the first Japanese album to sell more than 5 million copies which was achieved by the end of the year 9 14 On June 6 the Survive tour successfully ended In mid 1998 B z entered a period of both rest and recording During that period on September 20 their second best of album B z The Best Treasure was released selling almost 4 5 million copies by the end of the year 9 Returning to the music scene 1999 2000 Edit B z started off 1999 by busily promoting their recent singles and their tenth studio album Brotherhood which was released on July 14 It is considered their heaviest rock album up to that point 9 The album s track Giri Giri Chop Version 51 was recorded with drummer Pat Torpey and bassist Billy Sheehan both from Mr Big In July another dome class tour B z Live Gym 99 Brotherhood began in Sapporo and included 14 performances in 7 locations They did away with extra stage acts and concentrated on their musical performance playing songs from the new album and many hits from the past On August 28 and 29 they played at Yokohama International Stadium which were the first music concerts held in that stadium and gathered a total of 140 000 people over the two days Although the second day at Yokohama experienced heavy rain the tour ended successfully Shortly afterward B z started recording again and continued to do so throughout the rest of the year without rest On February 23 2000 they released the album B z The Mixture which included remastered tracks of past songs B sides remixes re recordings and a new song 9 In the middle of May they started rehearsal for the summer tour B z Live Gym Pleasure 2000 Juice with warmup shows starting in a hall class venue in Toyama on May 30 The tour totaled 18 shows in 10 cities starting with a performance at the famous Nippon Budokan on June 20 Their single Juice which featured drummer Brian Tichy 9 was released on July 12 and set a Japanese record of marking No 1 in the first week making it their 25th No 1 single in sequence A live video Once Upon a Time in Yokohama B z Live Gym 99 Brotherhood was released on August 2 On December 6 they released their eleventh album Eleven 9 B z finished off 2000 with an appearance on the TV show Music Station Special and would start rehearsal for their next tour Induction into Hollywood s RockWalk 2001 2007 Edit On February 26 2001 B z Live Gym 2001 Eleven kicked off with a warmup show at the Ehime Kenmin Bunka Kaikan which was exclusive to fan club members The tour had 46 shows in 19 locations and 600 000 attendees In March they released their thirty first and very popular single Ultra Soul 9 After the Okinawa shows on June 27 and 28 B z traveled abroad They officially released their CDs in Taiwan and Hong Kong and after finishing up the Eleven tour B z prepared for their first Asian tour which included B z Live Gym in Taipei 2001 and B z Live Gym in Hong Kong 2001 1 While B z started recording as soon as 2002 started Tak finished two solo albums Dragon From The West which consists of hard rock tunes and Hana which includes more melodic and Asian influenced tunes which were released simultaneously B z finished their recording in the middle of May and started rehearsal in Tokyo for the Live Gym tour that year as well as performing with Aerosmith on the stage of FIFA World Cup Korea Japan Official Concert International Day at Tokyo Stadium on June 27 9 1 On July 3 their twelfth album Green was released 9 The supporting tour B z Live Gym 2002 Green Go Fight Win began at Saitama Super Arena on July 8 and ended at Osaka Dome on September 9 encompassing 700 000 attendees 14 shows and 11 cities The live band was rounded out by bassist Billy Sheehan and Canadian drummer Shane Gaalaas 1 In September after the last show in Osaka B z had their first US tour B z Live Gym 2002 Rock n California Roll starting in San Diego at Canes Bar amp Grill on September 22 and The Palace in Los Angeles on September 24 On November 27 a live video A Beautiful Reel was released which packaged everything that happened on the Green tour as well as a second disc containing material from Rock n California Roll On December 11 their first ballad compilation album The Ballads Love amp B z was released 9 2003 marked their 15th anniversary 9 and the two started recording at the beginning of the year traveling to the United States in February for additional recording Along with continuous releases the tour B z Live Gym The Final Pleasure It s Showtime started in July This was intended as the final Pleasure tour a series of tours focusing on less popular songs which started in 1991 The tour kicked off on July 3 at Hakodate Shimin Kaikan and finished at Nagisa en on September 21 which just so happened to be the day of their debut having a total of 23 shows altogether Since it had been 10 years since B z performed at Nagisa en during B z Live Gym Pleasure 93 Jap the Ripper in 1993 it gathered 100 000 audiences over two days Even though the shows were hit by a typhoon and it rained very hard they still managed to attract thousands of attendees After the Nagisa en performance B z flew back to the US The tour B z Live Gym 2003 Banzai in North America included 7 shows including stops at Las Vegas Los Angeles San Francisco Seattle and Vancouver Their thirteenth album Big Machine was released on September 17 When they flew back to Japan B z started their third tour in 2003 B z Live Gym 2003 Big Machine It was a dome tour in 6 locations from Saitama Super Arena to Tokyo Dome in December Tak Matsumoto s cover album The Hit Parade with various vocalists including Inaba was released on November 26 Kicking off 2004 B z went back to the studio to begin recording again On February 25 a DVD Typhoon No 15 B z Live Gym The Final Pleasure It s Showtime in Nagisaen was released For the rest of the year they worked mainly on their solo projects Soon after finishing each solo tour they began recording together again On April 6 2005 B z released their fourteenth album The Circle For the album s recording the duo was particularly worried about its live sound For promotional activities B z started the tour B z Live Gym 2005 Circle of Rock that ran from April to September totaling 27 shows in 41 locations On August 1 the compilation The Complete B z was digitally released only for the Japanese iTunes Store in order to promote the iTunes Store in Japan which included a Japanese cover of Maroon 5 s This Love as a bonus Matsumoto s House of Strings label which he established a year before released its second album Theatre of Strings on October 19 On November 30 B z The Best Pleasure II their third compilation album was released reaching one million sales by the end of 2005 On June 28 2006 their fifteenth album Monster was released Most of the recording took place in Los Angeles B z kicked off the tour B z Live Gym 2006 Monster s Garage at the Amami Bunka Center on July 2 having 17 shows in all including 5 big domes in 11 locations and 450 000 audience members altogether On November 19 2007 B z was inducted into Hollywood s RockWalk as the first Asian inductee in Sunset Boulevard California United States They were recommended by Steve Vai whom they collaborated with in 1999 on the track Asian Sky from his album The Ultra Zone as well as supported him during his 2007 tour in Japan 1 12 Shortly after on December 5 B z released their sixteenth album Action The drum parts for the two singles from Action Eien no Tsubasa and Super Love Song were recorded by drummers Josh Freese and Jeremy Colson respectively 20th anniversary 2008 2009 Edit In February 2008 B z released a DVD titled B z Live in Nanba The show was recorded in 2006 and was also broadcast online The concert featured songs from The Circle and Monster eras along with a number of older hits as well as several English versions On April 16 2008 the band released their forty fifth single Burn Fumetsu no Face which became their forty first consecutive No 1 single The year also marked the twentieth anniversary of the band To commemorate the occasion the B z 20 campaign was launched that saw two further compilation albums B z The Best Ultra Pleasure was released on June 18 2008 and featured the greatest of the band s hits on a two disc collection in chronological order along with two all new modern recordings of older tracks while B z The Best Ultra Treasure was released on September 17 2008 whose two disc track listing was decided by fans who were invited to vote for three songs of their choice at the B z 20th anniversary website which featured an exclusive song on a three disc gift bundle as well as a re recording and a remix On January 25 2008 B z performed B z Showcase 2008 Kiyotake Action a performance in their Showcase series of tours which are generally small venue performances of older album songs and more obscure B sides that are mostly unsuitable for the larger arena concerts Following this B z immediately embarked on the eight month B z Live Gym 2008 Action tour which saw them perform all over Japan Afterward they segued into B z Live Gym Pleasure 2008 Glory Days their first Pleasure tour since 2003 Throughout the month of September B z performed for hundreds of thousands of fans in nine performances across three cities The special tour ended on September 21 at Nissan Stadium with a concert on the 20th anniversary of their first release This performance was later released on DVD on February 25 2009 as B z Live Gym Pleasure 2008 Glory Days A billboard advertising the album Magic in Shibuya Crossing 2009 Following their massive tour in 2008 B z returned to the studio to record new material Their first release of the year was a Double A side single Ichibu to Zenbu Dive released on August 5 2009 which featured drummer Chad Smith 15 The non full track ringtone downloads Chaku Uta of Ichibu to Zenbu began on July 13 2009 and the full track ringtone downloads Chaku Uta Full of the song began on August 26 2009 16 Because of its strong download sales in August and September on Recochoku the song won the Monthly Recochoku Award Best Song Award Grand Prix for Chaku Uta and Chaku Uta Full each for two consecutive months 17 On October 13 2009 KDDI also announced that Ichibu to Zenbu was awarded the Utatomo Award of September 2009 for the sales on Utatomo via au s LISMO 18 The second release was the single My Lonely Town released on October 14 2009 19 Both singles are featured in the band s next studio album Magic released on November 18 2009 20 On December 10 2009 it was announced that their single Ichibu to Zenbu Dive won the Hot 100 of the Year award at the Billboard Japan Music Awards 21 30th anniversary 2010 present Edit After the B z Live Gym 2010 Ain t No Magic tour Inaba and Matsumoto worked on solo activities and did not release any single as a duo in 2010 Matsumoto released the album Take Your Pick with Larry Carlton on June 2 2010 which later won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Album at the 53rd Grammy Awards on February 13 2011 22 Inaba s fourth solo studio album Hadou was also released on August 18 2010 debuting at number one on the Oricon album charts In 2011 they came back as B z with their forty eighth single Sayonara Kizu Darake no Hibi yo which was written for and used as a commercial song for Pepsi NEX They released their eighteenth studio album C mon on July 27 2011 which also featured their forty ninth single Don t Wanna Lie which was used as the ending theme in Detective Conan Quarter of Silence In the summer of 2011 B z embarked on their third North American tour B z Live Gym 2011 Long Time No See which featured shows in Vancouver San Francisco and Los Angeles 23 On May 4 2012 they released two singles Into Free Dangan an English re recording of Samayoeru Aoi Dangan which was used as the theme song for the video game Dragon s Dogma and their fiftieth single Go for It Baby Kioku no Sanmyaku 24 Into Free was later revealed as the lead single for their new English EP titled B z 25 which featured English re recordings of Ai no Bakudan Splash Juice and Ultra Soul 26 24 The songs were co selected and co written with their drummer Shane Gaalaas 12 The EP was released internationally through the iTunes Store and was released on July 25 2012 26 To support the EP B z embarked on their fourth North American tour titled B z Live Gym 2012 Into Free which included stops in San Francisco Seattle Vancouver Toronto Silver Spring New York City and Los Angeles 12 In an interview Matsumoto explained This will be our fourth US tour We love playing for American audiences and are excited to share our first English language release with our fans 26 The tour ended at the Universal Amphitheatre which almost sold out 27 In 2013 the group was the third highest earning artist by total sales revenue in Japan with 5 379 billion 28 In 2015 they released their nineteenth studio album Epic Day 29 as well the singles Uchōten and Red 30 In August 2017 the band released B z Complete Single Box Set and although being a high priced limited edition it managed to chart in the Top 10 31 B z released their fifty third single Seimei Still Alive in June which was their forty ninth single to top the Oricon charts 32 Their twentieth studio album Dinosaur was released in November 2017 which was their twenty eighth album to top the Oricon Albums Chart 33 To commemorate their 30th anniversary in 2018 they held a large exhibition between April and June at the Yurakuchō Infos building in Tokyo s Chiyoda ward 8 34 their music documentary B z 30th Year Exhibition Scenes 1988 2018 was screened in theatres nationwide 35 all 20 studio albums released up to that point were mastered for release as LPs 36 a commemorative book B z The Chronicle was released 37 and a new Pleasure tour B z Live Gym Pleasure 2018 Hinotori was held In July they released the video B z Live Gym 2017 2018 Live Dinosaur which topped both DVD and Blu ray charts selling over 90 thousand copies in the first week 38 Their new track Tsuwamono Hashiru was used for TV commercials for the 2019 Rugby World Cup which was held in Japan 39 On April 10 2019 the band announced their long awaited follow up to Dinosaur New Love The album was released on May 29 2019 and featured new backing band members who made their debut on that year s B z Live Gym 2019 Whole Lotta New Love tour as well as a guest appearance by Aerosmith s Joe Perry During the 2020 pandemic B z made their entire Live Gym catalog available to watch on YouTube for free including their most recent one Whole Lotta New Love B z covered Sexual Violet No 1 by Masahiro Kuwana for 2021 s Take Me to Kazemachi a tribute album to the song s lyricist Takashi Matsumoto 40 On May 21 2021 the majority of the B z catalog was made available on online music services such as Spotify and Apple Music worldwide including for the first time the United States Previously only the band s 2007 and 2012 self titled EPs were available on Apple Music in the US but currently only the latter is available 41 A new song was also released titled Kimi to Nara Later on December 8 they released their first mini album in 25 years Friends III 42 On August 10 2022 B z released their twenty second album Highway X 43 Music style EditThe band s music is composed by guitarist Tak Matsumoto while the lyrics are written by vocalist Koshi Inaba 9 44 The band has experimented with its style going from dance rock to hard rock to blues to J pop and back according to AllMusic 1 They have also been described as an ultra commercial blend of hard rock blues and synthesizer pop 45 Despite frequent changes in musical style during their first 13 years they didn t lose any support 9 In a review of their best selling album B z The Best Ultra Pleasure Adam Greenberg of AllMusic notes that they had some criticism as being more of a pop band with a rock tinge than a full fledged rock band but throughout their career they ve shown strong rock elements including 80s styled extended electric guitar solo and blues based rock with various Western rock influences combined with their distinctive style 46 Compared to two other big Japanese rock bands Mr Children and Glay the sound of the former can be described as soft while the latter is fast and rocking which is more comparable to B z 47 On Magic for example they have combined happy go lucky moods and hard rock aesthetics but instead of sounding like Western glam metal it s more similar to a visual kei sound indicating their influence on that movement and bands like L Arc en Ciel 48 Greenberg in a review of Ichibu to Zenbu Dive argued that most of their work has a somewhat disjointed structure creative vocal descents and cascades and riff heavy guitars 49 Marty Friedman compared them to Aerosmith but stated to prefer B z because of Inaba s type of voice and high vocal technique and Matsumoto s personality while playing the guitar solo 50 Matsumoto s guitar skills have been praised as the top guitar master in Asia with fretboard histrionics and a great sense of riff 48 Influence and legacy EditIt is considered that Matsumoto s guitar style has been influenced by the hard rock sound of Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple while Inaba who was interested in rock music since elementary school listened to Queen Loudness Aerosmith and others 9 In 2003 HMV Japan ranked the band at number 30 on their list of the 100 most important Japanese pop acts 9 In 2007 B z became the first music act from Asia to have their handprints and signatures put up on Hollywood s RockWalk 10 According to AllMusic they are considered the biggest rock act in Japan and the entirety of Asia 1 while the popular music historian Norman Abjorensen described them as one of the most notable J pop music acts who have achieved Asian and global fame 44 Matsumoto through his B z fame is also credited for a resurrection and reinvention of the Japanese guitar hero alongside and in comparison to X Japan s guitarist Hide for a model of guitarist more interested in technique technology and equipment popularizing the electric guitar as a mass media product in Japan 45 He also has numerous Gibson signature models with the first one being released in 1999 45 In Oricon s yearly poll of 20 000 people for Favorite Artist Ranking which started in 2004 they were regularly placed among the most popular music artists even in more recent years being ranked at number 4 2015 2016 2017 51 52 53 In 2015 in a survey by Oricon about peoples favorite song to relieve stress their song Ultra Soul was ranked second 54 Awards and achievements EditIn 2015 B z had 35 809 000 reported certified single sales for which they held the first place until December 2015 55 In 2017 they had 46 576 000 reported certified album sales for which they still hold the first place With joint sales of more than 82 million certified records they are ranked as the best selling music act in Japan 7 In 2008 for their 20th anniversary they were awarded a Guinness World Record for Best selling album act in Japan which also notes them to be the best selling act in Japan overall 11 They have 25 Platinum and 31 Million physical album certifications 9 Gold 33 Platinum and 20 Million physical single certifications and 11 Gold physical home video certifications by the Recording Industry Association of Japan The compilation album B z The Best Pleasure was the first Japanese album to sell more than 5 million copies and was the best selling album in Japan at the time which has achieved by the end of 1998 but it was surpassed by Hikaru Utada s First Love shortly after in 1999 9 Other sales records held by B z include the most number one singles 49 most consecutive number one singles 49 longest streak of number one singles 49 total weeks singles were at number one 66 longest consecutive period with a single at number one 20 Years most singles in the top 10 concurrently 9 the most million selling albums 19 most number one albums 26 and the only artist in history to lead all six major categories tracked by Oricon among others including total CD shipments of over 100 million copies 56 During the week of April 12 2003 they held eleven positions in the top twelve on the Oricon Singles Chart except for the second position 57 In 1999 at the World Music Awards they won the award for World s Best Selling Japanese Artist of the Year At the WMA they ve received several nominations including World s Best Live Act and World s Best Group in 2013 58 Years Japanese awards1990 Japan Cable Awards Most Requested Singer Award 59 Japan Record Awards Pop amp Rock Excellent Album Award Wicked Beat 60 1991 Japan Cable Awards Most Requested Singer Award 59 Japan Record Awards Pop amp Rock Excellent Album Award Risky 61 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Artists Award 62 1992 Japan Record Awards Pop amp Rock Excellent Album Award In the Life 63 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Artists Award Best 5 Singles Award Lady Navigation Best Home Video Award Just Another Life 64 1993 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Artists Award Best 5 Singles Award Blowin 65 1994 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Singles Award Ai no mama ni Wagamama ni Boku wa Kimi dake o Kizutsukenai Best Home Video Award Live Ripper 66 1995 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Artists Award Best 5 Singles Award Don t Leave Me 67 1996 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Artists Award Grand Prix Album Award Loose Folk Rock Award Loose Best Home Video Award Buzz The Movie 68 1998 Japan Gold Disc Award Rock Album of the Year Award Survive 69 1999 Japan Gold Disc Award Artist of the Year Award Song of the Year Award Home Rock Album of the Year Award B z The Best Pleasure B z The Best Treasure 70 2000 Japan Gold Disc Award Rock Album of the Year Award Brotherhood 71 2001 Japan Gold Disc Award Song of the Year Award Kon ya Tsuki no Mieru Oka ni Rock Album of the Year Award Eleven B z The Mixture 72 2002 Japan Gold Disc Award Rock amp Pop Album of the Year Award Green The Ballads Love amp B z Best Home Video Award a Beautiful Reel B z Live Gym 2002 Green Go Fight Win 73 2004 Japan Gold Disc Award Rock amp Pop Album of the Year Award Big Machine 74 2005 Japan Gold Disc Award Best Home Video Award Typhoon No 15 B z Live Gym The Final Pleasure It s Showtime in Nagisaen 75 2006 Japan Gold Disc Award Rock amp Pop Album of the Year Award The Circle B z The Best Pleasure II 76 2009 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 10 Albums Award B z The Best Ultra Pleasure 77 Billboard Japan Music Awards Hot 100 of the Year Award Ichibu to Zenbu Dive 21 2010 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Songs Award Ichibu to Zenbu Dive 78 2014 Japan Gold Disc Award Best 5 Albums Award B z The Best XXV 1988 1998 79 Discography EditMain article B z discography B z 1988 Off the Lock 1989 Break Through 1990 Risky 1990 In the Life 1991 Run 1992 The 7th Blues 1994 Loose 1995 Survive 1997 Brotherhood 1999 Eleven 2000 Green 2002 Big Machine 2003 The Circle 2005 Monster 2006 Action 2007 Magic 2009 C mon 2011 Epic Day 2015 Dinosaur 2017 New Love 2019 Highway X 2022 Bibliography EditBrotherhood Eleven Survive B z The Best Pleasure B z The Best Treasure B z The Mixture Green 西辺来龍 Dragon From The West Live on 1988 2003 Big Machine The Circle B z The Best Pleasure II MonsterTours EditLive Gym No 00 1989 Live Gym No 001 Off the Lock 1989 Live Gym Bad Club Gym 1989 Live Gym Break Through 1990 Live Gym 90 91 Risky Live Gym Pleasure 91 Live Gym 91 92 In the Life Live Gym Pleasure 92 Time Live Gym 93 Run Live Gym Pleasure 93 Jap the Ripper Live Gym 94 The 9th Blues Part 1 Live Gym 94 The 9th Blues Part 2 Live Gym Pleasure 95 Buzz Live Gym 96 Spirit Loose Live Gym Pleasure 97 Fireball Live Gym 98 Survive Live Gym 99 Brotherhood Live Gym Pleasure 2000 Juice Live Gym 2001 Eleven Live Gym in Taipei 2001 Live Gym in Hong Kong 2001 Live Gym 2002 Green Go Fight Win Live Gym 2002 Rock n California Roll 22 September Canes Bar amp Grill California 24 September The Palace California Live Gym 2003 The Final Pleasure It s Showtime Live Gym 2003 Banzai in North America 12 October House of Blues Las Vegas Nevada 14 October House of Blues Los Angeles California 15 October House of Blues Los Angeles California 18 October The Fillmore San Francisco California 19 October The Fillmore San Francisco California 21 October The Showbox Seattle 23 October Commodore Ballroom Vancouver British Columbia Canada Live Gym 2003 Big Machine Live Gym 2005 Circle of Rock Live Gym 2006 Monster s Garage B z Showcase 2007 The showcase 2007 is an unofficial tour They visited a few cities 3 to 5 and played to small audiences They played a lot of their old songs Many of them were rarely played live including their new English song that was used in Burnout Dominator s soundtrack Friction Live Gym 2008 Action Nagasaki Brick Hall Live Gym Pleasure 2008 Glory Days 6 September Kobe Universiade Memorial Stadium Kobe Hyōgo Prefecture 7 September Kobe Universiade Memorial Stadium Kobe Hyōgo Prefecture 13 September Toyota Stadium Toyota Aichi Prefecture 14 September Toyota Stadium Toyota Aichi Prefecture 20 September International Stadium Yokohama Yokohama Kanagawa Prefecture 21 September International Stadium Yokohama Yokohama Kanagawa Prefecture Live Gym 2010 Ain t No Magic Live Gym 2011 Long Time No See 20 July Vogue Theatre Vancouver British Columbia Canada 22 July The Fillmore San Francisco California 24 July Club Nokia Los Angeles California Live Gym 2011 C mon Live Gym 2012 Into Free 17 September The Warfield San Francisco California 19 September The Showbox SODO Seattle Washington 20 September Orpheum Theatre Vancouver British Columbia Canada 26 September Sound Academy Toronto Ontario Canada 28 September The Fillmore Silver Spring Maryland 30 September Best Buy Theater New York 7 October Gibson Amphitheatre Los Angeles California Live Gym 2012 Into Free Extra Live Gym Pleasure 2013 Endless Summer Live Gym 2015 Epic Night B z Showcase 2017 B z In Your Town Live Gym 2017 2018 Live Dinosaur Live Gym Pleasure 2018 Hinotori 7 July Okinawa Convention Center Naha Okinawa Prefecture 8 July Okinawa Convention Center Naha Okinawa Prefecture 14 July Sekisui Heim Super Arena Sendai Miyagi Prefecture 15 July Sekisui Heim Super Arena Sendai Miyagi Prefecture 21 July Ecopa Arena Fukuroi Shizuoka Prefecture 22 July Ecopa Arena Fukuroi Shizuoka Prefecture 28 July Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center Hiroshima Hiroshima Prefecture 29 July Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center Hiroshima Hiroshima Prefecture 4 August International Stadium Yokohama Yokohama Kanagawa Prefecture 5 August International Stadium Yokohama Yokohama Kanagawa Prefecture 11 August Ehime Prefectural Budokan Matsuyama Ehime Prefecture 12 August Ehime Prefectural Budokan Matsuyama Ehime Prefecture 22 August Sapporo Dome Sapporo Hokkaido 28 August Nagano Big Hat Nagano Nagano Prefecture 1 September Fukuoka Yahuoku Dome Fukuoka Fukuoka Prefecture 2 September Fukuoka Yahuoku Dome Fukuoka Fukuoka Prefecture 6 September Toyota Stadium Toyota Aichi Prefecture 8 September Toyota Stadium Toyota Aichi Prefecture 9 September Toyota Stadium Toyota Aichi Prefecture 15 September Yanmar Stadium Nagai Osaka Osaka Prefecture 16 September Yanmar Stadium Nagai Osaka Osaka Prefecture 21 September Ajinomoto Stadium Chofu Tokyo Prefecture 22 September Ajinomoto Stadium Chofu Tokyo Prefecture Live Gym 2019 Whole Lotta NEW LOVE B z SHOWCASE 2020 5 ERAS 8820 Day1 5 B z presents UNITE 01 with Mr Children and Glay B z presents Live Friends Live Gym 2022 Highway X Live Gym Pleasure 2023 STARS See also Edit Japan portal Music portal Rock music portal Biography portalList of records of Japan List of best selling albums in Japan List of best selling music artists List of best selling music artists in Japan List of J pop concerts held outside AsiaReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u B z biography AllMusic stylistic wanderings in which they have indulged a lot going from dance rock to hard rock to blues to J pop and back 佐伯明 B z ウルトラクロニクル ソニー マガジンズ 2003年 ISBN 4 7897 2101 9 新型光 B zはなぜこれほど売れるのか ちょっと真面目に考えてみた Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine R25 2005年12月15日 参照 2007年5月1日 Culross Mikey Hirano October 11 2017 Meeting of the Masters Rafu Shimpo Retrieved December 1 2017 B z got their 22nd No 1 album ranked No 1 in history and dominates all the 6 main ranking sections in Japanese Oricon 2008 06 24 Archived from the original on 16 October 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 14 B z 前人未到のシングル アルバム通算8000万枚突破 in Japanese Oricon 2011 08 02 Retrieved 2018 11 20 a b B z 通算28作目のアルバム首位 歴代1位記録を更新 in Japanese Oricon 2017 12 05 Retrieved 2018 11 20 a b B z celebrate 30 years in music business with Tokyo exhibition Asahi Shimbun 2018 04 23 Retrieved 2018 11 20 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Top 100 Japanese pops Artists No 30 HMV Japan in Japanese 2003 11 01 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a b Duo B z enters L A Rockwalk The Japan Times 2007 11 21 Retrieved 2008 11 14 a b Best selling album act in Japan Guinness World Records 12 March 2008 Retrieved 21 November 2018 The best selling album act in Japan is a hard rock duo B z Japan who has sold more than 42 million albums by 2008 They have also sold more than 34 million singles which makes them the best selling music act in Japan overall a b c d e Interview with B z JaME World 17 September 2012 Retrieved 22 November 2018 a b B z 歴代No 1アーティストまでの軌跡 in Japanese Oricon 2006 05 25 Archived from the original on 21 December 2008 Retrieved 2008 12 04 ミスチル シングル アルバム総売上枚数5000万枚突破 in Japanese Oricon 2007 03 19 Archived from the original on 21 December 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 15 Ichibutozenbu DIVE Announced OffTheLock 2009 06 17 Retrieved 2009 06 17 B z 月9主題歌がわずか6日間で月間1位に The Monday 9 theme by B z ranked at No 1 on the monthly charts with only six days sales in Japanese Livedoor 2009 09 03 Retrieved 2009 10 23 レコチョクアワード月間最優秀楽曲賞2009年9月度を発表 B zの月9主題歌 2ヶ月連続 着うた R 着うたフル R 制覇 in Japanese Excite News 2009 10 05 Retrieved 2009 10 23 EZ 着うたフル 9月によく聴かれた曲ランキング うたとも Award を発表 in Japanese KDDI 2009 10 13 Retrieved 2009 10 23 My Lonely Town at cdjapan co jp Magic at cdjapan co jp a b ビルボード ジャパン ミュージック アワード2009 チャート9部門各賞決定 in Japanese 47 News 2009 12 10 Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2009 12 12 B z Matsumoto bags pop Grammy The Japan Times 2011 02 15 Retrieved 2011 04 17 B z will tour North America this summer Asia Pacific Arts 2011 04 28 Archived from the original on 2013 09 23 Retrieved 2011 05 05 a b Interview B z Into Free Tour JrockRevolution com 20 October 2012 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Merryl Lentz 28 August 2012 Review of The B z New Album B z Screamer magazine Retrieved 22 November 2018 a b c John Katic 7 September 2012 Interview Guitarist Tak Matsumoto of B z Discusses the Band s First English Language EP and His Signature Edition Gibson Guitar World Retrieved 23 November 2018 Robyn Weiss 10 October 2012 B z LIVE Review Gibson Amphitheatre Universal City CA Screamer magazine Retrieved 22 November 2018 Oricon 2013 Yearly Charts Artist Total Sales tokyohive 6Theory Media LLC December 16 2013 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved April 22 2015 B z アルバム27作目首位 歴代1位の通算首位 総売上枚数更新 in Japanese Oricon 10 March 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z 歴代最多の通算64週1位 2年9ヶ月ぶり再始動 in Japanese Oricon 20 January 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z 男性歌手史上最高額でアルバムTOP10 in Japanese Oricon 5 September 2017 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z 49作連続49作目首位 2年ぶりシングルで in Japanese Oricon 20 June 2017 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z 通算28作目のアルバム首位 歴代1位記録を更新 in Japanese Oricon 5 December 2017 Retrieved 21 November 2018 レポート B z 30th Year Exhibition SCENES 1988 2018 の全貌 in Japanese Barks 11 April 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z 展覧会上映作品を全国映画館で 初公開の映像も追加 in Japanese Oricon 15 May 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z オリジナルアルバム20作品を一挙LP化 デビュー30周年記念 in Japanese Oricon 22 March 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z デビュー記念日に30周年記念本 300P超え ザ クロニクル in Japanese Oricon 29 June 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z最新ライブ映像 映像ランキング3冠 in Japanese Oricon 12 July 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 Japanese Rock Superduo B z Hypes 2019 Rugby World Cup With New Song Billboard 5 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 B z 松本隆トリビュートAL参加決定 桑名正博 セクシャルバイオレットNo 1 をカバー Barks in Japanese 2021 06 15 Retrieved 2021 08 03 Every B z Single amp Album Now Streaming WORLDWIDE on Spotify amp More OFF THE LOCK Your Number 1 Source for B z 21 May 2021 B z コンセプトアルバム FRIENDS III 収録詳細およびアートワーク公開 BARKS in Japanese Retrieved 2023 01 06 B z 22thフルアルバム Highway X を8月リリース BARKS in Japanese Retrieved 2023 01 06 a b Abjorensen Norman 2017 Historical Dictionary of Popular Music Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 23 78 262 ISBN 978 1 5381 0215 2 a b c Freedman Alisa Slade Toby 2018 Introducing Japanese Popular Culture Taylor amp Francis pp 144 145 ISBN 978 1 317 52893 7 Adam Greenberg B z the Best Ultra Pleasure Review AllMusic Retrieved 21 November 2018 Alexey Eremenko Action Review AllMusic Retrieved 21 November 2018 a b Alexey Eremenko Magic Review AllMusic Retrieved 21 November 2018 Adam Greenberg Ichibu to Zenbu Dive Review AllMusic Retrieved 21 November 2018 Marty Friedman 20 October 2009 イージーリスニングみたいなメロディーでもロックに聴かせるB zの底力 Nikkei Trendy Net in Japanese Nikkei Business Publications Retrieved 21 November 2018 音楽ファン2万人が選ぶ 好きなアーティストランキング 2015 in Japanese Oricon 22 October 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2018 第13回 音楽ファン2万人が選ぶ 好きなアーティストランキング 2016 in Japanese Oricon 14 November 2016 Retrieved 21 November 2018 第14回 音楽ファン2万人が選ぶ 好きなアーティストランキング 2017 in Japanese Oricon 7 December 2017 Retrieved 21 November 2018 ストレス解消発散ソング1位はあの名曲 思いっきり歌いたい 人が多数 in Japanese Oricon 21 May 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2018 Total sales of AKB48 singles hit 36 million copies a Japan record The Japan Times 2015 12 10 Retrieved 2018 11 20 Ten Years On B z as Guinness World Record Holders Off The Lock Vermillion Records 24 May 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 Fred Bronson 12 April 2003 Cheart Beat The B z Kn Zs Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc The Beatles may have owned the entire top five on the Hot 100 in April 1964 but that s nothing compared with the domination of this week s Japanese singles chart by the B z The duo made up of Tak Matsumoto and Koshi Inaba have locked up 11 of the top 12 positions It s Showtime Vermillion debuts at No 1 Except for a single by Smap at No 2 the next 10 songs are all by the B z B z Nominated At World Music Awards 2013 Off The Lock Vermillion Records 23 August 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2018 a b B zの受賞履歴 ranking cansystem info in Japanese Retrieved 22 November 2018 The Japan Record Awards 1990 in Japanese Japan Composer s Association Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Record Awards 1991 in Japanese Japan Composer s Association Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1991 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Record Awards 1992 in Japanese Japan Composer s Association Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1992 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1993 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1994 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1995 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1996 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1998 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 1999 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2000 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2001 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2002 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2004 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2005 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2006 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2009 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2010 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 The Japan Gold Disc Award 2014 in Japanese RIAJ Retrieved 21 November 2018 B z biography at the official websiteExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to B z B z Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title B 27z amp oldid 1134932415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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