翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Jon Nørgaard discography
・ Jon O'Bir
・ Jon O'Connor
・ Jon O'Donnell
・ Jon O'Mahony
・ Jon O. Newman
・ Jon Oberlander
・ Jon Odlum
・ Jon Odriozola
・ Jon Okafor
・ Jon Ola Norbom
・ Jon Ola Sand
・ Jon Olav Alstad
・ Jon Olav Hjelde
・ Jon Oliva
Jon Oliva's Pain
・ Jon Olsen
・ Jon Olsson
・ Jon Oosterhuis
・ Jon Opstad
・ Jon Oringer
・ Jon Orloff
・ Jon Ortner
・ Jon Otsemobor
・ Jon Owen
・ Jon Owen Jones
・ Jon P. Diamond
・ Jon P. Wilcox
・ Jon Palfreman
・ Jon Papernick


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Jon Oliva's Pain : ウィキペディア英語版
Jon Oliva's Pain

Jon Oliva's Pain (sometimes referred to as JOP) is the latest project of Savatage co-founder Jon Oliva.
==Band history==

Originally, the project consisted entirely of solo recordings by Oliva, but after several months of work he was joined by former members of Circle II Circle to form a band.
The band's first performance was at the Criss Oliva Memorial Concert in 2003, where Oliva played a set of 6 songs from his solo catalog plus "In the Dream" from ''Power of the Night'', "Hey Bulldog" by The Beatles and a cover of "Wishing Well" by the band Free (which was covered by Savatage on their album ''Fight for the Rock'').〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Jon Oliva's Pain (band biography) )〕 Joining Jon on stage that night were Matt LaPorte (guitar), John Zahner (keyboards), Jason Jennings (bass), and Christopher Kinder (drums). Initially, the band went out on tour in December 2003 under the name "The Jon Oliva Project", but this was later changed to "'Tage Mahal". The band's name was changed after discovering the blues musician Taj Mahal. Because of the laws surrounding consumer confusion, Oliva instructed the band's name be changed to Jon Oliva's Pain, "Pain" being the working title of the band's first album. The music and themes bear comparison with the likes of Alice Cooper, focusing as they do on elements of obsession, pain, confusion and insanity. Oliva himself cites The Beatles, Queen and The Who amongst his and hence the band's influences.〔
After hearing the results of their earliest studio sessions together, Oliva then decided to repeat the solo work from scratch with the band.〔 The band embraced the opportunity without hesitation, and brought in former Circle II Circle bass player Kevin Rothney to solidify the line-up. The band released their first album '''Tage Mahal'' on the SPV label in 2004.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Jon Oliva's Pain (band biography) )
Originally slated to be released on the same label in May 2006, JOP subsequently signed to AFM Records for the release of the follow-up entitled ''Maniacal Renderings'', which was due for release on September 4, 2006.〔AFM press release〕 Oliva cites SPV's reluctance to promote the previous record as a major factor in his decision to move labels.〔ProgPowerUK II programme. Interview with Jon Oliva, page 7.〕 Oliva credits his late brother Criss (with whom he founded Savatage) as co-writing some of the work on the album (particularly the track "The Answer"), after finding some working tapes they had recorded together shortly before Criss's death in a road accident in 1993.〔
A tour taking them through most of Summer 2006 saw the band appearing at festivals in Europe. The tour reportedly included the performance of two Savatage songs at each concert. During a performance at the UK's ProgPower festival in March 2007, Oliva and the band paid tribute to one of Savatage's works, ''Streets: A Rock Opera'', by playing a majority of the album in running order for the first time as a "gift" to fans. Oliva remarked that some of the songs had never been performed live in the 16 years since the album's first release.
Interviews pointed to a third album being recorded by the band in late 2007 ready for a release by AFM Records in January or February 2008. In January 2008, a release date in April via AFM was confirmed for the new album, entitled ''Global Warning'', with the band announcing that the new album has now been both mixed and mastered.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Jon Olivia's Pain: Global Warning Now Finished; Tour Dates Announced )〕 After the album's release, the band embarked on a tour of North America and Europe with new guitarist Tom McDyne along with Circle II Circle and Manticora. The tour meant that Jon Oliva shared the stage with Zachary Stevens for the first time in almost 10 years. At the conclusion of the tour, the band announced that it had commenced pre-production on its fourth release, with a due date of 2009. The band toured the United States and Europe once more in 2009.
The fourth release, entitled ''Festival'', was released in February 2010. Plans for a live DVD to be filmed in 2009 were re-scheduled, with a concert at 013 in Tilburg, the Netherlands in October 2010 being tentatively scheduled for filming with a view to a live-DVD release in 2011. A live DVD release will mark the first time that Oliva will handle solo lead vocal material over much of his material. In September 2010, it was announced that due to "undisclosed personal reasons", both Tom McDyne and Kevin Rothney would be forced to sit-out the band's European tour and DVD filming. Former touring guitar player from the '''Tage Mahal'' tour, Jerry Outlaw was tapped to play guitars, with Jason Gaines, described as "Tampa's phenom bass player" replacing Rothney for the duration of the tour. As yet the DVD has still not been released. The band did however record their show in Florida in April 2012, the first night of a short tour celebrating the 25th Anniversary of Savatage's ''Hall of The Mountain King'' album, for a DVD release, and it now looks likely this will be released before the ''Festival'' tour one.
Oliva revealed that he would not travel with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra during their European tour in a statement released in March 2011. On April 20, 2011; guitarist Matt LaPorte died suddenly at his home.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Jon Oliva's Pain」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.