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  1. X Japan at Madison Square Garden, 2014. Japanese heavy metal band X Japan has performed more than 250 concerts from 1987 until October 2018. This number does not include the so-called "film gig" concerts, which are included below. Concerts and other performances A March 1989 show at Shibuya Kōkaidō (pictured in 2011) was released as the Blue Blood Tour Bakuhatsu Sunzen Gig concert video ...

  2. Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 11.81 x 3.94 x 7.87 inches; 2.43 Pounds. Media Format ‏ : ‎ Limited Edition. Language ‏ : ‎ Japanese (Dolby Digital 5.1), Japanese (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo) ASIN ‏ : ‎ B000QUCZOS. Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 6. Customer Reviews: 4.4 99 ratings.

  3. Taiji Sawada (Japanese: 沢田 泰司, Hepburn: Sawada Taiji, July 12, 1966 – July 17, 2011), also known mononymously as Taiji, was a Japanese musician and songwriter.He is best known as the former bassist of the rock band X Japan.X Japan rose to prominence in the late 1980s and early 1990s, credited as founders of the Japanese visual kei movement.

  4. Mixed by – Mike Ging. Recorded by – Mike Ging, Rich Breen, Stan Katayama, Kazuhiko Inada. Assistant engineers – Tal Miller, C.J. Devillar, Dokk Knight, Carl Nappa, Paul Falcone. Mastered by – Stephen Marcussen (Precision Studio) A&R directed by – Osamu Nagashima. Art directed by – Shige#11.

  5. History Introduction X Japan has had a long life, with several forms and line ups. It all began with childhood friends Yoshiki and Toshi. From a early age, Yoshiki began to play classical piano. His mother began to teach him at the age of 4, as she was a piano teacher. His father would regularly give him money to go down to the local record store and purchase classical recordings from the ...

  6. Blue Blood is the second studio album by Japanese rock band X Japan, then known as simply X.It was released on April 21, 1989, by CBS/Sony as the band's major label debut. Blue Blood sold more than 700,000 copies, reached number 6 on the Oricon chart and stayed on the chart for more than 100 weeks. The album's singles would also reach the top five on the chart.

  7. It was written and composed by Yoshiki, later appeared on the album Dahlia, and was used as the theme song for the 1994 Japanese TV drama Kimi ga Mienai (君が見えない). [1] A new version of "Rusty Nail" was reportedly recorded for X Japan's unreleased studio album, [2] before it was decided to create entirely new material instead.