Tang Dynasty (band)

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Tang Dynasty
Origin Beijing, China
Genre(s) Rock, Art Rock
Progressive Rock
Ethno-Rock
Heavy Metal
Alternative Metal
Years active 1988—Present
Label(s) China Fire-Magic Stone-Rock Records (1992-1997), Jingwen Records (1998-2001), Jingguan Records (present)
Associated acts Budaoweng
Black Panther
Breathing
Cui Jian
White Angel
The Micro-organists
Members
Ding Wu (vocals)
Liu Yijun (guitar)
Chen Lei (guitar)
Gu Zhong (bass)
Zhao Nian (drums)
Former members
Zhang Ju(deceased)
Kaiser Kuo
Andrew Szabo

Tang Dynasty (Chinese: 唐朝; pinyin: Táng Cháo) is a Chinese ethnic-art rock and prog-metal band that is often credited as being the first heavy metal band in China.

Tang Dynasty rose to fame in 1992 with a self-titled debut album, which had officially sold about 2,000,000 authentic copies throughout Asia and abroad, not counting the multitudes more of pirated copies. Their sound is part progressive rock and artistic metal and part traditional Chinese vocal techniques with lyrical poetry and musical arrangements meant to hearken back to the glorious days of ancient Chinese civilization; in particular, the cultural epitome of Chinese history as popularly represented by the era of the Tang Dynasty.

The Tang Dynasty band soon became the icon of Chinese hard rock music, and their lightning-fast guitarist Liu Yijun (刘义军), a.k.a. "Lao Wu", became the first rock guitar hero in China. However, tragedy casted a dark shadow over the band in 1995 with the untimely death of bassist Zhang Ju, who was riding his motorcycle from a fellow rock scene bassist friend Chen Jin's home, when an accident occurred involving a collision with a truck on a freeway overpass in Beijing, known as the "Zizhuqiao" (Purple Bamboo Bridge). This dealt a heavy blow to the band, and Liu Yijun subsequently left the band and was replaced by original founding member Kaiser Kuo, a Sino-American who has formed another well-recognized Chinese metal-rock band, the Spring and Autumn.

The band's 1999 release "Epic" was their second album, 7 years after its debut record. Epic did maintain a level of artfully composed series of new prog-metal rock songs that helped bring success to their debut album, but may otherwise be described as a little bit more of a straight-ahead rock music rendition with a little less ethnic orientation, which had unfortunately received relatively lukewarm reviews. Nevertheless, the album was still popular enough to elicit waves of unauthorized copies in the pirated market. Kaiser Kuo again parted company with Tang Dynasty, and young guitar virtuoso Chen Lei joined the band in 2000. In 2002, Lao Wu rejoined the group and Tang Dynasty is at its present five-man band form, featuring contrasting styles of Chen Lei and Lao Wu both exchanging and interplaying guitar work, and fattening-up their overall live sound with Ding Wu's occasional coloring in their sound pallette with a third guitar.

As of late 2007 and early 2008, Tang Dynasty is finishing off on the recording and pre-production of their third album "Langman Qishi" slated for release in mid-2008, featuring "Feng Shan Ji" as the album's lead track. [1]


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