Hiroshima (band) explained

Hiroshima
Background:group_or_band
Origin:Los Angeles, California
Genre:Smooth jazz, R&B, pop, world music[1]
Years Active:1974–present
Label:Arista, Epic, Qwest, Heads Up
Current Members:
  • Dan Kuramoto
  • June Kuramoto
  • Danny Yamamoto
  • Dean Cortez
  • Kimo Cornwell
Past Members:
  • Jess Acuna
  • Jeanette Clinger
  • Peter Hata
  • Dave Iwataki
  • Teri Koide
  • Shoj Kameda
  • Teri Kusumoto
  • Barbara Long
  • Richard Mathews
  • Dane Matsumura
  • Johnny Mori
  • Margaret "Machun" Sasaki-Taylor
  • John Shipley
  • Terry Steele

Hiroshima is an American band formed in 1974 that incorporates Japanese instruments in its music. Hiroshima has sold over four million albums around the world.

Biography

Dan Kuramoto, Hiroshima's leader, is from East Los Angeles. He attended California State University, Long Beach, then led its Asian-American studies department. Through playing in a band on weekends he met June Kuramoto, a native of Japan who grew up in Los Angeles and played koto, a Japanese stringed instrument. Kuramoto admired Earth, Wind, and Fire for the way it combined jazz and R&B, and Santana for his identification with Latinos. He wanted to create a band that would represent Asian Americans. He named it after the Japanese city Hiroshima, which was mostly destroyed by an atomic weapon at the end of World War II.[2]

Hiroshima's debut album sold more than 100,000 copies in its first three months. The band's second album yielded the song "Winds of Change", which received a Grammy Award nomination for Best R&B Instrumental. Hiroshima got its first gold album in 1985 with Another Place and the second with Go which followed it. The album Legacy was nominated for Best Pop Instrumental Album in 2010. Hiroshima has sold more than four million albums worldwide. In 1990, the band was the opening act for Miles Davis, and in 1988 they played with T-Square at the Hibiya Open-Air Concert Hall.

Hiroshima consists of Dan Kuramoto (saxophone, flute, keyboards, shakuhachi), June Kuramoto (koto), Kimo Cornwell (Keyboards), Dean Cortez (Bass guitar), and Danny Yamamoto (drums and taiko).

Awards and honors

Hiroshima was given the Visionary Award by East West Players, the oldest Asian Pacific American theatre company in the United States,[3] for the band's "Impact on the Asian Pacific American (APA) community through their artistic excellence and support of the Asian Pacific American performing arts."[4]

Members

Past

Discography

Title Year Label
Hiroshima1979Arista
Odori1980Arista
Third Generation 1983Epic
Another Place 1985Epic
Go 1987Epic
East 1989Epic
Providence 1992Epic
L.A. 1994Qwest
Urban World Music 1996Qwest
Between Black and White 1999Windham Hill
The Bridge 2003Heads Up
Spirit of the Season 2004Heads Up
Obon 2005Heads Up
Little Tokyo 2007Heads Up
Departure 2011Hiroshima
J-Town Beat 2013CD Baby/Hiroshima
20202021Hiroshima

References

  1. Web site: Yanow . Scott . Hiroshima . AllMusic . 19 October 2018.
  2. Web site: Chang . Heidi . After 40 Years, Hiroshima's Music Still Resonates . NBC News . 19 October 2018 . 16 September 2016.
  3. Web site: Behind the Curtains: The Evolution and Impact of Asian Americans in Theatre US-China Institute. china.usc.edu. en. 2019-07-25 .
  4. Web site: East West Player 46th Anniversary Visionary Awards to Honor Kimora Lee Simmons, Hiroshima and TAIKOPROJECT. BWW News Desk. BroadwayWorld.com. en. 2019-07-25.
  5. http://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/profiles/78/ Johnny Mori
  6. http://onensemble.org/about/ About

External links