3rd Anniversary 3days live
The THIRTEEN 3rd Anniversary 3days live
2019.03.22 SHIBUYA REX
OPEN 17:30 / START 18:00
前売¥4,800
Cast: The THIRTEEN / GOTCHAROCKA / KHRYST+
Setlist:
01. 螺旋階段
02. LET'S SING ALONG
03. FEEDLE-DE-DEE
04. DON'T BE SILLY
05. WELCOME TO HEAVEN'S GATE
06. FREAKING OUT
07. ボクトアソボウヨ…
08. REDRUM
Manami Toyota (豊田 真奈美 Toyota Manami, born March 2, 1971) in Masuda, Shimane, Japan, she is a retired professional wrestler, best known for her work with the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) promotion.
Following AJW's closure, she continued to work in other joshi promotions such as Gaea and NEO. Toyota is a member of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame. Dave Meltzer has called Toyota "one of the greatest wrestlers of all-time, regardless of gender"
Manami Toyota made her professional wrestling debut on August 5, 1987, at the age of 16, in a singles match against Sachiko Nakamura. Her big break came in her second year, on the first Wrestlemarinpiad show from Yokohama Arena, on May 6, 1989. Teamed with Mima Shimoda as the Tokyo Sweethearts, she defeated Etsuko Mita and Toshiyo Yamada in a match that nearly stole the card from the more established veterans.[2] The bout had all the basic ingredients that made Toyota a star, including flashy moves, fast and frequent tags, double-team moves, and a long series of dramatic near falls. When the bout was released as part of a four-hour commercial tape, Toyota became recognized as a wrestler to watch
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s): Manami Toyota
Billed height: 1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Billed weight: 68 kg (150 lb)
Trained by: Jaguar Yokota
Debut: August 5, 1987
Retired: November 3, 2017
Mayumi Ozaki (尾崎 魔弓 Ozaki Mayumi) (born October 28, 1968) is a Japanese professional wrestler.
Ozaki debuted in a tag team match in August, 1986. [3] In her career, she held the WWWA tag titles with Dynamite Kansai from April 11, 1993 to December 6, 1993 (both winning from and losing to Manami Toyota and Toshiyo Yamada of All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling, selected for "Wrestling Observer Newsletter's Match of the Year for 1993". They rematched in April 1993 and won at the Dreamslam II (and with it the titles); the first time a woman's match won the award. Their final match was at St. Battle Final in December. (AJW). [4] She also held the UWA Junior and JWP Junior titles between 1988 and 1991, and teamed with Cutie Suzuki and Hikari Fukuoka to win the JWP Tag Titles a number of times between 1992 and 1995. She held the AAAW Tag Team Championship with Aja Kong, beating GAEA's Sugar Sato and Chikayo Nagashima on August 23, 1998 in Tokyo.
Ring name(s): Mayumi Ozaki
Mayumi Saita
Pure Wild: Queen of the Street Fight
Billed height: 1.55 m (5 ft 1 in)
Billed weight: 57 kg (126 lb)
Trained by: Kotetsu Yamamoto
Debut: August 17, 1986
WWE: World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc., d/b/a WWE, is an American integrated media and entertainment company that is primarily known for professional wrestling. WWE has also branched out into other fields, including movies, real estate, and various other business ventures.
The WWE name also refers to the professional wrestling promotion itself, founded by Jess McMahon and Toots Mondt in 1952 as the Capitol Wrestling Corporation. As of 2019, it is the largest wrestling promotion in the world, holding over 500 events a year, with the roster divided up into various globally traveling brands, and is available to about 36 million viewers in more than 150 countries. The company's global headquarters is located in Stamford, Connecticut, with offices in major cities across the world.
As in other professional wrestling promotions, WWE shows are not legitimate contests, but purely entertainment-based, featuring storyline-driven, scripted, and choreographed matches, though matches often include moves that can put performers at risk of injury if not performed correctly. This was first publicly acknowledged by WWE's owner Vince McMahon in 1989 to avoid taxes from athletic commissions. Since the 1980s, WWE publicly has branded their product as sports entertainment, acknowledging the product's roots in competitive sport and dramatic theater.
The company's majority owner is its chairman and CEO, Vince McMahon, who retains a 42% ownership of the company's outstanding stock and 83% of the voting power.
The current entity, incorporated on February 21, 1980, was previously known as Titan Sports, Inc., which was founded that same year in South Yarmouth, Massachusetts. It acquired Capitol Wrestling Corporation Ltd., the holding company for the World Wrestling Federation, in 1982. Titan was renamed World Wrestling Federation, Inc. in 1998, then World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. in 1999, and finally the current World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. in 2002. Since 2011, the company has officially branded itself solely as WWE though the company's legal name was not changed.
Erika Shishido is a Japanese professional wrestler better known by her ring name Aja Kong. She is the founder of the Arsion all-women professional wrestling promotion and has won several championships in both singles and tag team divisions throughout her career, primarily while with All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling. Wikipedia
Born: September 25, 1970 (age 48 years), Tachikawa, Tokyo, Japan
Full name: Erika Shishido
Height: 1.65 m
Billed weight: 103 kg
Nationality: Japanese
Chieko Suzuki (鈴木 智江子 Suzuki Chieko, born December 4, 1969) is a retired Japanese female professional wrestler, better known by the ring name Dynamite Kansai (ダイナマイト関西 Dainamaito Kansai)
Chieko Suzuki was born on December 4, 1969, and was raised in Kyoto, Japan. In 1986 she auditioned for All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW), but was unsuccessful, and instead joined the first rookie class of Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling. She debuted on August 17, 1986 in Korakuen Hall, Tokyo under the ring name Miss A. When Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling was dissolved, Suzuki became part of the JWP Project. She wrestled in the United States for World Championship Wrestling, but returned to Japan in 1991, and changed her ring name to Dynamite Kansai. After leaving Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling in the mid-1990s, she joined a new wrestling promotion organisation, GAEA Japan. In 2006, she worked for Mayumi Ozaki's promotion, OZ Academy. In 2015, Kansai returned to the United States for the first time in twenty-four years, appearing for Shimmer Women Athletes alongside Aja Kong. In 2012, she was diagnosed with lung cancer and was declared cancer-free after a four-year battle. Kansai ended her 30-year career on December 11, 2016, defeating Mayumi Ozaki in her retirement match
All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (全日本女子プロレス Zennihon Joshi Puroresu), nicknamed Zenjo (全女: 全 meaning "All", 女 meaning "Woman") was a joshi puroresu (women's professional wrestling) promotion established in 1968 by Takashi Matsunaga and his brothers. The group held their first card on June 4 of that year. For many years, it had a TV program on Fuji TV.
The All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling Corporation, established in 1968, was the successor to the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling Association, which had been formed in August 1955, to oversee the plethora of women's wrestling promotions that had sprung up in Japan following a tour in November, 1954, by Mildred Burke and her World Women's Wrestling Association (WWWA). These promotions included the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling Federation, and the All Japan Women's Wrestling Club, started in 1948, which was the first women's wrestling promotion in Japan. For a time the Club pushed female wrestling as a legitimate sport, booking sporting arenas.In the fall of 1970, AJW, which had been contesting the American Girls' Wrestling Association Championship since the previous year, hosted Marie Vagnone, new holder of Mildred Burke's WWWA World Single Championship which had been revived in a WWWA tournament earlier that year in Los Angeles. On October 15, 1970, in Tokyo, Vagnone lost the WWWA title to Aiko Kyo, and AJW had a new world championship singles belt. The next year, AJW acquired the WWWA World Tag Team Championship as well, when Jumbo Miyamoto and Aiko Kyo were made the first champions on June 30, 1971.
WWWA World Tag Team Championship: The World Women's Wrestling Association (WWWA) World Tag Team Championship was the top doubles championship in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) from 1970 until it closed in 2005. During those years the title was held by many of the most famous tag teams in Japanese women's professional wrestling, including the Beauty Pair (Jackie Sato and Maki Ueda) and the Crush Gals (Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka). The WWWA Tag Team belt succeeded AJW's original tag belt, the American Girls Wrestling Association (AGWA) Tag Team Championship, which was contested in AJW from 1968 until 1970.
Total Nonstop Action (TNA) Wrestling is a privately held American professional wrestling promotion based in Nashville, Tennessee. Founded by its former President, Jeff Jarrett, and former Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Jerry Jarrett, in 2002 as J Sports & Entertainment, LLC (operated as NWA: Total Nonstop Action; a.k.a. NWA-TNA), it is the second-largest professional wrestling promotion in the United States, after WWE and before Ring of Honor.
Panda Energy International purchased a controlling interest (71%) in the company in 2002 from Jerry Jarrett, re-incorporating it to TNA Entertainment, LLC in the process. Then, in 2012, Panda Energy divested itself of its stake in TNA. Jeff, the company's former Vice President, departed the company as Executive Vice President of Development/Original Programming on December 22, 2013, but remained as minority shareholder until his return on June 24, 2015. Jarrett's departure as minority shareholder, and therefore his complete departure from the company, came as a result of his return to the promotion, with the deal for his return including the transfer of his minority stake. According to reports, in 2012, when Panda Energy divested itself of its ownership stake in TNA, TNA's President and Panda Energy founder Robert Carter and President and Chief Executive Officer Janice Carter's daughter, Dixie, acquired said stake, making her TNA's majority shareholder. Then, in 2015, when Jarrett sold his minority stake, Dixie acquired that as well, placing her as TNA's sole shareholder, along with her continuing as President.
According to a report, on August 7, 2015, TNA filed a new business name of Impact Ventures LLC. It was reported near the beginning of 2016 that Aroluxe Marketing, a Brentwood, Tennessee-based marketing agency, had taken a stake in TNA at the start of 2016 in return for providing partial funding, as well as taking over TNA's production operations. It was reported on June 6, 2016 that Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan acquired a minority stake in TNA from Dixie Carter, placing him as TNA's minority owner and Dixie's partner within TNA; however, it has since been clarified through a lawsuit Corgan has filed against TNA that he provided a loan to Dixie. Then, on August 12, 2016, TNA appointed Corgan as the company's new President and the transition of Dixie from President to the company's new Chairman and Chief Strategy Officer. It was reported on September 16, 2016 by the New York Post that Canada's Fight Network, through its parent company, Anthem Sports & Entertainment Corporation, had taken a stake in TNA. On November 4, 2016, the New York Post reported that Corgan had been removed as President, then on November 30, it also reported that Corgan had settled his lawsuit against TNA, with Anthem Sports & Entertainment Corp acquiring the loans Corgan made to Dixie in the process.
The AAAW (All Asia Athlete Women's) Single Championship or AAAW Championship was a women's professional wrestling championship belt contested in the Japanese women's professional wrestling promotion Gaea Japan The belt was abandoned in 2005, after Gaea was closed down.
Promotion: Gaea Japan
Date established: November 2, 1996
Other name(s): AAAW Heavyweight Championship
In professional wrestling, the independent circuit or indie circuit is the collective name of independent professional wrestling promotions which are smaller than major televised promotions. It is roughly analogous to a minor league for pro wrestling, or community or regional theatre.
Specific promotions on the independent circuit are referred to as indie promotions or indies. A wrestler is said to be in the indies or working the indies if she or he is wrestling in one of the independent promotions, or working the indie circuit if she or he is performing in different independent promotions
The National Wrestling Alliance is an American professional wrestling organization. Formed in 1948, it was for a time the most-recognized brand and largest governing body in professional wrestling. Wikipedia
Founded: 1948
Headquarters: Waterloo, Iowa, United States
Founders:
Sam Muchnick, Orville Brown, Tony Stecher, Pinkie George, Harry Light
Acronym NWA
Founded 1948; 71 years ago
Founder(s)
Pinkie George
Al Haft
Tony Stecher
Harry Light
Orville Brown
Sam Muchnick
Don Owen
Owner(s):
Robert Trobich – Pro Wrestling Organization LLC (1989–2012)
R. Bruce Tharpe – International Wrestling Corp, LLC (2012–2017)
Billy Corgan – Lightning One, Inc.(2017–present)
While Sadie is on hiatus, two of the members — vocalist Mao and guitarist Mizuki — have gone on to form a new unit named The THIRTEEN. Prior to the unveiling of the members of The THIRTEEN, various visual kei artists like members of the GazettE, had been retweeting the duo’s new unit teaser and countdown, lending Mao and Mizuki a hand in building up the suspense of their new endeavor. The pair is set to release their first full album PANDEMIC on May 25, and perform their first live at Tokyo’s Akasaka BLITZ on June 24.
The THIRTEEN have released two teasers thus far, with a spooky first trailer asking, “What’s the truth “THIRTEEN” indicates?” and a second teaser with a preview of their music video for the album’s main track “CHAINSAW”.
The THIRTEEN also provided us with a promotional version of their music video Lament, taken from their upcoming mini-album of the same name though styled differently, LAMENT (ラメント). The video reaches the four-minute mark despite being a promotional version so this should be long enough to give us a major idea of the full thing.
Lament is characterized by the complete absence of Mao’s harsh vocals. This time around the vocalist opted for the use of his clean voice reaching a pleasant higher tone in the chorus. In the instrumentation, we can also hear acoustic guitar, piano, and violins accompanying Mizuki’s intense guitar playing. Honorable mentions go to support members Kazu from “gibkiy gibkiy gibkiy”, and former AWOI drummer Ryo who also appears in the video playing their respective instruments.
Gremlins is a 1984 American comedy horror film directed by Joe Dante and released by Warner Bros. The film is about a young man who receives a strange creature called a mogwai as a pet, which then spawns other creatures who transform into small, destructive, evil monsters. This story was continued with a sequel, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, released in 1990. Unlike the more satirical tone of the sequel (which parodies Hollywood sequels), Gremlins opts for more black comedy, balanced against a Christmastime setting. Both films were the center of large merchandising campaigns.
Steven Spielberg was the film's executive producer, with the film being produced by Michael Finnell and written by Chris Columbus, drawing on legends of gremlins in the RAF going back to World War II. The film stars Zach Galligan and Phoebe Cates, with Howie Mandel providing the voice of Gizmo, the main mogwai character.
Gremlins was a commercial success and received positive reviews from critics. However, the film was also heavily criticized for some of its more violent sequences. In response to this and to similar complaints about Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Spielberg suggested that the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) alter its rating system, which it did within two months of the film's release, creating a new PG-13 rating.
Randall Peltzer, a struggling inventor, visits a Chinatown antique store in the hope of finding a Christmas present for his son Billy. In the store, Randall encounters a small, furry creature called a mogwai (Cantonese: 魔怪, "devil"). The owner, Mr. Wing, refuses to sell the creature to Randall. However, his grandson secretly sells the mogwai to Randall, warning him to remember three important rules that must never be broken—do not expose the mogwai to bright lights or sunlight which will kill it, do not let it get wet, and never feed it after midnight.
Randall returns home to Kingston Falls where he gives the mogwai to Billy as a pet. Billy works in the local bank, where he fears his dog Barney will be captured and killed by the elderly Mrs. Deagle. Randall names the mogwai “Gizmo” and Billy makes sure to treat him well. When Billy’s friend Pete spills a glass of water over Gizmo, five more mogwai spawn from his back, a more troublemaking sort led by the aggressive Stripe. Billy shows one of the mogwai to his former science teacher, Mr. Hanson, spawning another mogwai, on whom Hanson experiments. Back at home, Stripe’s gang tricks Billy into feeding them after midnight by severing the power cord to his bedside clock. They make cocoons, as does Hanson’s mogwai. Shortly after, the cocoons hatch and they emerge as mischievous, reptilian monsters that torture Gizmo and try to murder Billy’s mother, while Hanson is killed by his 'gremlin'.
Chiyuki Urano (浦野 智行 ) is a Japanese classical baritone and bass who has appeared in concert and recital.
Urano studied at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music and was awarded prizes at several competitions. He has recorded cantatas and other compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach with the Bach Collegium Japan conducted by Masaaki Suzuki, both as a soloist and a member of the ensemble. With the ensemble, he recorded in 1998 the vox Christi (voice of Christ) in Bach's St John Passion, with Gerd Türk as the Evangelist and Peter Kooy singing the bass roles and arias, in a recording praised by one critic as "the essential version of this work", and by another as "the best I've ever encountered". A year later, he recorded the bass roles and arias in Bach's St Matthew Passion, while Kooy was the vox Christi, and Türk again the Evangelist. He recorded in 2000 with them the bass solos in volume 14 of the complete Bach cantata cycle, in Was soll ich aus dir machen, Ephraim, BWV 89, alongside Midori Suzuki and Robin Blaze. He recorded in 2004 two oratorios by Bach, the Easter Oratorio (Kommt, eilet und laufet), BWV 249, and the Ascension Oratorio (Lobet Gott in seinen Reichen), BWV 11, alongside Yukari Noonoshita, Patrick Van Goethem and Jan Kobow.
Urano recorded with composer and pianist Lera Auerbach a collection of Russian art songs called Tolstoy's Waltz, of works by Russians who are known in different fields than music. Leo Tolstoy composed a waltz in his 20s, while other featured works were composed by the writer Boris Pasternak, the ballet directors Sergei Diaghilev and George Balanchine, the artists Vasily Polenov and Pavel Fedotov, and the diplomat Aleksandr Griboyedov. Urano sings five songs, two by Polenow, two by Fedotov and one by Diaghilev. A review notes that he "has a warm, effortless voice and good Russian pronunciation".
Musical show