Background: | person |
Ayasa | |
Birth Name: | Ayasa Shimamura |
Birth Date: | 19 October 1991 |
Origin: | Tokyo, Japan |
Genre: | Rock |
Instrument: | Violin |
Years Active: | 2008–present |
Label: | Dreamusic |
Past Member Of: | Sword of the Far East |
, known professionally by the mononym Ayasa, is a Japanese rock violinist and voice actress. She is the violinist for the band Morfonica of the BanG Dream! multimedia franchise, which includes portraying the character Rui Yashio. In addition, she posts YouTube videos where she plays violin covers of anime songs while wearing cosplay and has released several albums with the record label Dreamusic.
Ayasa Shimamura,[1] a native of Tokyo, was born on 19 October 1991,[2] and at the age of three, she started playing the violin. While studying at Toho Girls' High School, Ayasa was ranked 4th place in the 2009 Japan Classical Music Competition's high school violin section.[3] She attended summer seminars at the Accademia Musicale Chigiana and Tokushima Bunri University.[2]
In April 2008, under the name, Ayasa made her first acting appearance in a Suntory commercial for their Minami-Alps no Tennensui brand, playing the Vittorio Monti song "Csárdás" on a violin.[4] [2] Ayasa later recalled in a 2019 interview with Oricon News that this gig allowed her to make her first appearance in a national concert tour,[5] namely at Okayama Symphony Hall with the Saint Petersburg Festival Orchestra in December 2009.[6] In 2011, Ayasa became a producer of the Sword of the Far East rock violin music project, serving alongside Do As Infinity band member Dai Nagao. In April 2013, she and media personality appeared together at Momoiro Clover Z's Haru no Ichidaiji concert at Seibu Dome.[7]
In January 2015, Ayasa announced that she would depart from Sword of the Far East, citing a desire to do solo work as a reason.[8] In November 2015, she released her first solo album, Chronicle I. In 2016, she teamed up with musical group for her next album, Chronicle II. Over the next few years, more albums followed: Chronicle III (2016), Chronicle IV (2016), and Chronicle V (2018). In 2017, she also released a greatest hits album, Best I, and another version, Best I Special Edition Ver.1. In 2019, Ayasa released five albums, one on the first day of each consecutive month: Chronicle VI in June, Chronicle VII in July, Anisong Cover Night Vol.1 in August, Chronicle VIII in September, and Anisong Cover Night Vol.2 in October.[9] Two more albums were later released over the next two years: Anisong Cover Night Vol.3 (2020) and Anisong Cover Night Vol.4 (2021). In May 2023, she released Live In Japan: Symphonic Metallization, a concert album of her performances at the Symphonic Metallization concert in January 2020.[10]
Ayasa, whose love of anime had stemmed from her interest in Rozen Maiden music during her adolescence, later regained interest in anime after watching Code Geass. In the mid-2010s, Ayasa started uploading YouTube videos of herself playing the violin, many of which feature her wearing cosplay. Songs she has covered include "Ichiban no Takaramono (Yui final ver.)" (a song from the Angel Beats! anime franchise) and "Daddy! Daddy! Do! feat. Airi Suzuki" (the opening theme song of 's second season).[11] Anime! Anime, a Japanese-language anime news site, praised her "splendid cosplay appearance and outstanding violin skills".[11] In an interview with Oricon News in 2018, Ayasa revealed that she started making such videos because she felt that there weren't any other people doing so.[12]
In 2015, she appeared as herself in Not Anymore!, a mockumentary film where she is the subject of a documentary film. In 2016, she appeared in a commercial for the Sony Xperia X Performance smartphone model. She performed the theme song of the TBS White Sacas 10th Anniversary television show, "Kokuhaku no Yoru", which was also included in her album Chronicle V.
In April 2016, she and singer Ataru Nakamura performed with Dir En Grey guitarist Die's new band Decays.[13] [14] In July 2018, Ayasa was announced as a guest in the 2018 Anime Festival Asia event in Jakarta, Indonesia.[15] In August 2018, Ayasa played a violin medley of Fate/Grand Order music at the Fate/Grand Order Fes. 2018, with Akiba Souken calling the performance "sometimes elegant and sometimes intense",[16] and she and singer formed the duo +A and performed the song Bōkyaku no Saint, the ending theme song of Fuji TV show ; the song was later released as part of a single on 8 August 2018.[12] [17] In October 2018, Ayasa played the theme song of The Prince of Tennis: Best Games!! Tezuka vs Atobe, and the single it was included in charted at #136 in the Oricon Album Charts. She and singer Alan Dawa Dolma performed the ending theme "Akai Ame" for the Japanese version of the 2021 ONA Vlad Love, and she alone performed the instrumental "Shingetsu" for the ending of the international versions.[18]
In March 2020, Ayasa was announced as the violinist of Morfonica, one of the bands of Bushiroad's BanG Dream! multimedia franchise, and as the voice actor of Rui Yashio, the violinist and composer of the band's fictional counterpart of the same name.[19] [20] Her role as Rui was Ayasa's first voice acting role.[11] Kara Dennison of Otaku USA credited Ayasa's inclusion in the franchise with allowing her "anime fandom [to] hit new heights".[20] In the same year, Ayasa began voicing the character in BanG Dream! Girls Band Party! Pico, the franchise's chibi short anime spinoff. Famitsu praised her violin performance in Morfonica's first standalone concert Cantabile as "elegant and powerful".[21] In 2022, she appeared with the rest of Morfonica in the anime spinoff Morfonication.
In August 2023, Ayasa announced a new band, named East Of Eden, and released first digital single and music video.[22] [23]
Title | Year | Single details | Peak chart positions | Sales | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | JPN Hot | ||||
"Best Games!!" | 2018 |
| 136[24] | - | - |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that region. | |||||
Title | Year | Album details | Peak chart positions | Sales | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JPN | JPN Hot | ||||
Chronicle I | 2015 |
| 102[25] | - | - |
Chronicle II | 2016 |
| 64[26] | - | - |
Chronicle III | 2016 |
| 81[27] | - | - |
Chronicle IV | 2016 |
| 112[28] | - | - |
Best I | 2017 |
| 52[29] | - | - |
Best I Special Edition Ver.1 | 2017 |
| 112[30] | - | - |
Chronicle V | 2018 |
| 91[31] | - | - |
Chronicle VI | 2019 |
| - | - | - |
Chronicle VII | 2019 |
| - | - | - |
Anisong Cover Night Vol.1 | 2019 |
| - | - | - |
Chronicle VIII | 2019 |
| - | - | - |
Anisong Cover Night Vol.2 | 2019 |
| - | - | - |
Anisong Cover Night Vol.3 | 2020 |
| - | - | - |
Anisong Cover Night Vol.4 | 2021 |
| - | - | - |
Live In Japan: Symphonic Metallization | 2023 |
| - | - | - |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that region. | |||||