4D-JAM

4D-Jam is a Japanese R&B and soul music unit under the Giza Studio label active in 1998–2002. In 2014, they came back from 12-year hiatus under indies label Con4Tunes.

4D-JAM
Also known as4D
D-JAM
OriginJapan
GenresR&B, Soul, House
Years active1998–2002, since 2013
LabelsStyling Records(1998)
Garage Indies Zapping Association (1999)
Giza Studio (1999–2002)
Con4Tunes (since 2014)
WebsiteOfficial Website
Past membersMaho Furukawa
Kenji Shiojiri
Hiromu Nakao
E:mju
Mirai & Nozomi

Members

  • Maho Furukawa (ふるかわ♥魔法)) – vocalist, lyricist
  • Kenji Shiojiri (シオジリケンジ) – leader, vocalist, composer, lyricist, arranger
  • Hiromu Nakao (中尾弘)) – arranger
  • E:mju – DJ
  • Mirai & Nozomi – Dancers

History

The formation of band began in 1996 with Kenji and Hiromu together.[1]

In September 1998, as a duo unit they released analog single Finger under indies R&B label Styling Records. In the same month, during music television program's audition Hip Hop performing Minnie Riperton's Lovin' You. Soon after, she joined 4D-Jam as a main vocalist and become Maho's solo project.[2]

In March 1999, as a trio unit they released a first indies single Taiyou no Nai Asa Tsuki no Nai Yoru under indies label Garage Indies Zapping Association. One month later in April, they released the major single Cocoro. During the production of the second single, dancers Mirani and Nozomi left the unit, while DJ E:mju joined 4D-Jam. In June, Kenji was involved with music production as arranger for Zard's single Sekai wa Kitto Mirai no Naka along with Hirohito Furui and Yuuichirou Iwai from New Cinema Tokage. In the same month, they released their first media song city of tracks which was used as ending theme for the DirecTV program Matsuo Kiyoshi Teki Ongaku Seikatsu. In August, they released major album City of Tracks, however the album didn't enter the Oricon Weekly Charts. In October, Kenji was involved once more with Zard music production as composer and arranger of the single Itai Kurai Kimi ga Afureteiru yo; Maho and Hiromu were involved as well as chorus members. In November, their fourth single Ma Life was commercially used as an opening theme for theTBS Television program Kyaeen: Kanpei no Megami no Shinsou.

In January 2000, Maho was involved with music production as a chorus member in Rumania Montevideo's second studio album Girl, Girl, Boy, Girl, Boy. In March 2000, one year after major debut, their fourth single Wondering Hands had become their first anime song for the television series Monster Rancher. After the release of the single B Original, E:mju left the unit. In July, they released their second and final studio album Come Jam Space. It was their first and only work which reached rank No. 89 in the Oricon Weekly Charts, charting for two weeks and selling a total of 5,490 copies. In August, Maho was involved with the music production as a chorus member in the Rumania Montevideo single Start All Over Again.

In April 2001, Maho was involved with music production as a chorus member in The Tambourines debut single Easy game. In May 2001, they released their final single Big Good Lovin'. The single was included in Giza Studio's compilation album Giza Studio Masterpiece Blend 2001. In June, Kenji provided music for singer-songwriter Miki Matsuhashi's debut single Time Stand Still. In August, Maho provided chorus support for the Mai Kuraki single Can't Forget Your Love.

In January 2002, Maho provided chorus support for Mai Kuraki's single Winter Bells. In October 2002, the unit entered into hiatus without announcement. The whereabouts of Hiromu were unknown.

In 2013, the unit came back from hiatus with Maho as lead vocalist and Kenji as composer and arranger and under indies label Con4Tunes. In 2014, they released digital single Music and third studio album S・S・S〜Soul Searchin’ System.

Discography

Singles

Release Day Title CD code
Indies 1999/3/10 Taiyou no Nai Asa Tsuki no Nai Yoru ICR-5
1st 1999/4/21 Cocoro GZCA-1005
2nd 1999/6/30 City of Tracks GZCA-1009
3rd 1999/11/17 Ma Life GZCA-1015
4th 2000/2/23 Wonderin' Hands GZCA-1020
5th 2000/5/24 B ORIGINAL GZCA-1031
6th 2001/5/23 Big Good Lovin' GZCA-1078
7th 2014/3/7 Music -[3]

Studio album

Release Day Title Chart
1st 1999/8/4 CITY OF TRACKS -
2nd 2000/7/5 COME JAM SPACE 86[4]
3rd 2014/5/28 S.S.S ~ Soul Searchin' System -

Magazine appearances

From Music Freak Magazine:

  • Vol.52 1999/March[5]
  • Vol.53 1999/April[6]
  • Vol.55 1999/June[7]
  • Vol.57 1999/August[8]
  • Vol.60 1999/November[9]
  • Vol.63 2000/February[10]
  • Vol.66 2000/May[11]
  • Vol.67 2000/June[12]
  • Vol.68 2000/July[13]
  • Vol.69 2000/August[14]
  • Vol.73 2000/December[15]
  • Vol.78 2001/May[16]

From J Groove Music:

gollark: Since it's good, Terra?
gollark: Use Arch with i3 or sway. Obviously.
gollark: Terra: wrong answer.
gollark: You could just switch to Haiku.
gollark: I run a Windows VM so that I can use the WSL to run Wine to run Putty.

References

  1. From Giza Studio Blend Mastepiece 2001 Booklet
  2. "4D-Jam Biography". Biography from 4D-Jam Official Website.
  3. digital single
  4. "COME JAM SPACE (4D-JAM)". Oricon News.
  5. "Music Freak Magazine 1999 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  6. "Music Freak Magazine 1999 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  7. "Music Freak Magazine 1999 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  8. "Music Freak Magazine 1999 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  9. "Music Freak Magazine 1999 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  10. "Music Freak Magazine 2000 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  11. "Music Freak Magazine 2000 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  12. "Music Freak Magazine 2000 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  13. "Music Freak Magazine 2000 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  14. "Music Freak Magazine 2000 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  15. "Music Freak Magazine 2000 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  16. "Music Freak Magazine 2001 Releases". Official Website of Music Freak Magazine (in Japanese).
  17. "JGM: Vol.9 2001/July". Official Website of J Groove Magazine (WebArchived) (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2003-02-13.
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