Fri, Nov 10, 2000 - Page 7 News List

Music Brief

Air Supply

Australian soft rockers Air Supply will be playing in Kaohsiung and Taipei on Nov. 17 and Nov. 18.

The band formed in 1975, founded by lead singer Russell Hitchcock and songwriter Graham Russell, and has been entertaining the world with their love songs ever since. Their first album in 1980 yielded three hit songs, including the title song Lost In Love, and singles All Out of Love and Every Woman in the World. Their following albums in 1981 -- The One That You Love -- and 1983 -- Making Love Out of Nothing at All -- were also both big hits at the time.

The band's popularity tailed off toward the end of the 1980s and they broke up in 1988 -- only to come back together in 1991. For their 25th anniversary world tour, they are dusting off some of the old favorites that endeared them to audiences in Taiwan during several visits in the 1990s, such as Strong Strong Wind, Unchained Melody, Without You and Now and Forever. The band will also perform their new song of the year, The Scene, and pepper the show with a few covers.

WHAT: Air Supply: 25th anniversary concert (空中補給站合唱團25週年告別演唱會)

WHEN & WHERE: Nov. 17, Kaohsiung County Fengshan Stadium (高雄縣立鳳山體育館 ) and Nov. 18, Dr Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall (台北國父紀念館)

TICKETS: Kaohsiung, NT$1200 and NT$700; Taipei NT$600 to NT$3000.

Luna Sea

Sometimes one gets the feeling that the Japanese group Luna Sea is not so much a band as a religion. The group's fans live their lives in unpolluted devotion to their idols, dressing like band members and call themselves "slaves." In Japan, the dress-up is known as "cosplay," and the band's self-anointed acolytes can easily tell the difference between, say, fellow idolaters "cosplaying" lead singer Ryuichi in his "Rosier" period and those made up as Ryuichi in any of his subsequent transformations.

Next weekend, Luna Sea will test Taiwan fans' willingness to put on a mid-November Halloween show when the band comes to Taipei for what may be the group's last ever concert here. More than halfway through its current tour, Brand New Chaos: Act II, the band announced on Nov. 7 that it would break up after the tour climaxes with two final shows in the Tokyo Dome in December. Speculation about such a break-up has been going on for quite a while in the Japanese media, as most of the band's five members have taken on solo projects within the past few years.

If the breakup does in fact come, it would put an end to the 11 year phenomenon that was one of the most influential bands in contemporary Japan. Luna Sea was probably the most important progenitor of Japan's visual rock movement, a genre which raised the importance of image, costume and stage spectacles to equal or even surpass the traditional emphasis on music alone.

When Luna Sea began living this new direction in the early 1990s, Japan's youth was apparently ready for the audio-visual-lifestyle mixture, as they chose not to dress up only for concerts, but to live their daily lives cosplaying their heroes in Luna Sea and other visually geared rock bands.

Like Luna Sea's music, the look is gothic and glam. Often made-up with white zombie-like faces, kids transform themselves with bleached mop hairdos, fishnet everything, general androgyny and black, black, black. In Tokyo's Yoyogi Park, the plaza in front of the Sendai train station and scores of other locations throughout Japan, these slaves linger night and day to their own strange purposes.

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