Animelo Summer Live 2016 - TOKI - 8月26/27/28日

Kugayama

Moderator
First announcement of artists to be made at Anime Japan on 26 March 2016 for the artists at Animelo Summer Live 2016, 26/27/28 August 2016 at Saitama Super Arena:

https://www.anime-japan.jp/stage/open_stage/
3月26日(土)のプログラム
13:05 〜 14:05

  • 新作発表
  • トーク
Program4

Animelo Summer Live 2016 記者発表会
登壇者
Animelo Summer Live 2016出演アーティスト
鷲崎 健(司会進行)
内容
12年目を迎える日本最大級のアニソンライブイベント「Animelo Summer Live 2016」の記者発表会を行います。イベント概要に加えて第一弾出演アーティストの発表、出演アーティスト登壇も予定しています。
「Animelo Summer Live 2016」は、さいたまスーパーアリーナにて、2016年8月26日(金)、27日(土)、28日(日)の3日間の開催が決定しております。
関連サイト
 
First press orders for the 2015 blu-rays (with coupons for 2016 ticket lottery) end on 20th February 2016 unless sold out before:

https://twitter.com/anisama/status/692987301018861568

【アニサマ2015Blu-ray予約受付中】初回版Blu-rayの店頭予約締切は2/20まで!チケット最速先行予約の応募券は初回版のみに封入されます。確実に入手したい方は数に限りがありますのでお早めにご予約下さい
#anisama

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So, fairly regular acts missing from 2016 are Nana Mizuki, Minori Chihara, any Yuki Kajiura related artists, JAM Project, Kanako Ito, Yukari Tamura, motsu, ELISA.
 
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@Atlas Star - no mention of any Yuki Kajiura related act, so that's why I said "missing" amongst other acts that had appeared 3 or more times (FJ was in 2009, Kalafina in 2011, 2014, 2015).

Some other artists will get announced later or be surprise appearances on the days.
 
https://twitter.com/LiSA_OLiVE/status/713629429918896128

「Animelo Summer Live 2016 刻-TOKI-」私は8月27日に出演させていただきます。今年はテーマソングにも参加させていただきました。よろしく今年もお願いします。



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http://anisama.tv/news/detail.php?id=2

アニサマ2016 テーマソングは、話題の「Q-MHz」が参加!
12回目となるアニサマのテーマソングは、畑 亜貴、田代智一、黒須克彦、田淵智也(UNISON SQUARE GARDEN)が結成したプロデュースチーム「Q-MHz」が楽曲を担当しました。
オリジナルとなる今作にもレーベルを越えてアーティストが歌唱参加し、イベントに先駆けて4月26日(火)より、タワーレコード限定でCDを発売します。

●テーマソング概要
タイトル:PASSION RIDERS
(Animelo Summer Live 2016 刻-TOKI-テーマソング)
作詞:畑 亜貴
作曲/編曲:Q-MHz
歌唱アーティスト:相坂優歌、藍井エイル、蒼井翔太、every♥ing!、大橋彩香、黒崎真音、GRANRODEO、SCREEN mode、鈴木このみ、早見沙織、三森すずこ、LiSA(50音順)

●CD発売情報
4月26日(火)より、タワーレコード店舗、タワーレコードオンライン限定にて発売。
品番:TRJC-1057 価格:¥600(税抜)

●着うた・着うたフル配信情報
4月8日(金)よりanimelo mixにてCD発売に先駆けて独占配信!

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畑 亜貴、田代智一、黒須克彦、田淵智也。
J-POP、アニソン、ゲームソング、アイドルソングなど個々で幅広く活動してきた音楽家の4人が結成したプロデュースチーム。
2016年1月に小松未可子、鈴木このみ、東山奈央、南條愛乃、LiSAの5人をフィーチャーしたアルバム「Q-MHz」を発売して以降、楽曲提供から単体プロデュースまで、刺激的な音楽を世に放つべく業界の片隅で静かに大暴れ中。
 
Koji Saito (Animelo Summer Live producer) and Konomi Suzuki:

https://twitter.com/Suzuki_Konomin/status/713679610668392448

アニサマ記者発表終わりで、さいとーぴーと写真を撮らせて頂きました♪昨日も今日も、ありがとうございました!髭とスーツ、新鮮で似合ってました~!卒業式の親子みたいだとスタッフさんに言われました(^○^)最高の歌を刻めるよう、頑張ります!

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I do hope Kalafina does end up going, but maybe the 15th Anniversary Jounetsu Tairiku SPECIAL LIVE on the 27th is why they aren't apart of the lineup?
 
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2016/04/16/general/anime-biz-sings-praises-shows/

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Anisong(anime song) and rock singer LiSA performs live at Makuhari Messe Hall in Chiba last December. | HAJIME KAMIIISAKA, © ANIPLEX INC., SONY MUSIC ARTISTS INC.
CULTURE|CULTURE SMASH
Anime biz sings the praises of shows
BYROLAND KELTS

SPECIAL TO THE JAPAN TIMES

ARTICLE HISTORY
The first time I attended AnimeJapan, the industry’s annual spring showcase in Odaiba, Tokyo, it was called the Tokyo International Anime Fair. Members of the public couldn’t enter during the first two days, amateur cosplay(costume play) was prohibited, and while there were some presentations, most of the offerings were brochures, catalogs and swag bags. It was primarily a trade show and almost everything was printed in Japanese.

Not so at last month’s AnimeJapan 2016, where five stages kept the main halls booming with live music, variety shows, voice-acting demonstrations, panels and seminars. One stage hosted an anime career counseling center. Another presented a nearly nonstop lineup of mascots and singalongs for parents and kids under 12.

An expanded Cosplayer’s World section replete with dressing rooms, stage sets and an outdoor platform encouraged fans to pose and preen, then eat anime-inspired cuisine at an adjacent food court. Most of the signs and exhibitions had English translations, and often Chinese and Korean. The business area was in a separate hall entirely — soberly lit, filled with information booths and roundtables, comparatively hushed.

The results were record-breaking: attendance was up 11 percent over last year, the largest ever for the event; the number of exhibitors grew by 18 percent, and business attendees by 30 percent.

The shift toward live performance and fan participation reflects a broader trend in anime. As profits from DVD sales and collectables continue to stagnate or diminish, producers and studios are turning to big-ticket live shows to keep fans engaged.

Three years ago, the Association of Japanese Animations (AJA) added a new category to its yearly data reports: Live Entertainment. According to Tadashi Sudo, editor in chief of Anime!Anime!, the industry’s chief online information portal, the category is now “the most active” in the business.

While Internet distribution via streaming media may be growing at a faster pace, he tells me, “Live events and entertainment have greater potential — not only through live concerts, but also theme parks, exhibitions, live gaming events and musicals. We think it will be big.”

Aside from ticket and merchandising sales, the key advantage to live showcases is that the experience can’t be copied and pirated. The anime industry calls these happenings “2.5-dimensional,” integrating the 2-D of traditional anime with in-the-flesh performers and audiences.

“We’ve been keeping our eye on the music business,” says one veteran producer, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “They’re about five years ahead in terms of piracy damage because music data is so small. (In the U.S.) Tower Records went into Chapter 11 (bankruptcy) and HMV is gone. Major acts like Madonna and U2 make their money off big world tours. That’s the direction we’re heading, too.”

Music is the main driver of anime’s live presence. In the 4-year-old multimedia event known as Love Live!, last held at the beginning of this month over two days at Tokyo Dome (prime seats going for $30,000 in online auctions), voice actors dressed as their characters onstage and performed anisongs— theme songs from their series — singing and dancing in tandem with their screen-projected animated illustrations.

The concert was live-streamed in select markets in Asia and Australia. One week later, one of its co-producers, Lantis Company, Ltd., announced the opening of its first overseas operation, AmuseLantis Europe S.A.S., at a press conference in Paris.

Online platforms are getting in on the 2.5-D action. The Japanese video-sharing site Nico Nico Douga’s fourth annual Nico Nico Chokaigi will take place at the Makuhari Messe convention center in Chiba on April 29 and 30, promising to yoke together live versions of everything imaginable from the site, from cooking to anime cosplay to sumo wrestling and robotics. Last year’s show drew more than 150,000 attendees, with 7.9 million singing and dancing along online.

The largest annual anime-music live event, Animelo Summer Live (think Fuji Rock for anime fans), will span three days from Aug. 26 to 28 at the Saitama Super Arena. Japanese pop and rock singer LiSA (Risa Oribe), 28, whose songs have been featured in anime series such as “Angel Beats!,” “Fate / Zero” and “Sword Art Online” will be appearing at her sixth Animelo since launching her solo career in 2010.

At the Tokyo office of her record company, LiSA (which stands for “Love is Same All”) tells me she was drawn to singing by an animation, though it was American: Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast.” Growing up in rural Gifu Prefecture, she learned the lyrics and melody to the opening song, “Belle,” about a young woman trapped in the humdrum life of a provincial village — and she proceeds to sing me a few bars in lilting a cappella.

But LiSA’s musical rock influences are slightly edgier than Disney: Avril Lavigne, Love Psychedelico, Green Day. At her concert I caught late last year at the Makuhari Messe hall in Chiba, where she performed before the largest audience of her career, I watched her cycle through several pop music styles, from lighthearted J-pop to ballads to darker and harder guitar-driven rock. For the song “Doctor,” she switched from mini-skirted kawaii (cute) to goth aggressor, imitating intercourse with a model skeleton prop.

“It’s a mix of mischievous and cute,” she says, “while still rocking out.”

To fans of Western rock, many anisongs sound too cute, saccharine, overblown or mawkish. But with the expanding number of live anime music events, musicians such as LiSA see an opportunity to bridge the two fan bases. In 2012, she performed at Anime Expo (AX) in Los Angeles, North America’s largest anime convention.

At the time, she says, she was frustrated. LA was the home to many of her rock and punk idols, but she was being received as ” ‘Lisa from Japan,’ a representative of anime.” She’s since become more deeply involved in anime, learning the processes behind its creation, even becoming a fan of auteurs such as directors Makoto Shinkai and the late Satoshi Kon.

To celebrate her fifth year as a recording artist, LiSA will release her new mini-album in Japan on April 20. Called “Lucky Hi Five!,” its title would suit an anime series just fine.

Roland Kelts is the author of “Japanamerica: How Japanese Pop Culture has Invaded the U.S.” He is a visiting scholar at Keio University in Tokyo.
 
Although I can't find the reference I think that there will be 4 more blocks of artist announcements for this year.
 
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