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Kurumi Enomoto

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Native name
  
榎本くるみ

Years active
  
2002–present

Associated acts
  
Bump of Chicken

Instruments
  
Vocals

Genres
  
J-pop

Occupation(s)
  
Singer-songwriter

Role
  
Singer-songwriter

Also known as
  
Kurumi (くるみ)

Name
  
Kurumi Enomoto


Kurumi Enomoto httpsiytimgcomviTKzYs2zVZIhqdefaultjpg


Born
  
17 October 1981 (age 42) Nagoya, Japan (
1981-10-17
)

Albums
  
Notebook II: Boken Note-chu, Notebook I: Mirai no Kioku, NOTEBOOK Ⅰ ~未来の記憶~, Anata ni Tsutaetai

Record labels
  
For Life Music, Sony Music Entertainment Japan

Similar People
  
Motoo Fujiwara, Atsuko Enomoto, Bump of Chicken, Oceanlane, 8otto

Tales of the abyss ending full bouken suisei kurumi enomoto


Kurumi Enomoto (榎本 くるみ, Enomoto Kurumi, born 17 October 1981), formerly known as Kurumi (くるみ), is a Japanese singer-songwriter. She debuted in 2002 with the independently released single Moeru Taiyō (燃える太陽, Burning Sun). She is most well known for singing the ending theme song for the anime adaptation of the Namco role-playing video game Tales of the Abyss, "Bōken Suisei."

Contents

Biography

Enomoto was born in Nagoya. She first gained an interest in music in late primary school. She joined the school band in her final year, and started listening to top 40-charts based Western music. She was particularly impressed by Madonna, though also liked such music as hard-rock bands. She wrote her first song on the piano in this period. It was called Maboroshi (, Phantom) and it expressed much of the unhappiness she felt at the time. She later resumed writing songs regularly when she was 19.

Two years later in August 2002, Enomoto released her first single, "Moeru Taiyō," under the independent label Nagare Records with the mononym Kurumi (くるみ). It was sold exclusively at six Tower Records stores, and managed to chart at #3 on the Sapporo store's instore independent single charts, as well as #8 on the total single charts at the Nagoya Kintetsu Pass'e store. In December of the same year, she debuted under SME Records as a major label artist. The first song she'd ever written, "Maboroshi," was released as her debut single, followed by "Color Ningen" in June. Neither single charted on Oricon charts' top 200 singles chart. After performing at a few live events throughout 2003, Enomoto ceased activity under Sony.

Enomoto did no musical activities in 2004, and in late 2005 released another independent single, "Yasashii Uta o Utaitai," under her full name. This led to her second major-label contract, this time with For Life Music. She re-debuted with the single "Kokoro no Katachi". Her music was most popular on Nagoya-based FM radio stations: her singles "Kokoro no Katachi" and "Uchiage Hanabi" reached #3 on the ZIP-FM airplay charts, and her third, "Rainbow Dust," reached #1. "Rainbow Dust" was used as the theme song for the drama Sweets Dream. These were followed by her debut album, Notebook I: Mirai no Kioku.

From October 2007 until February 2008, Enomoto released three singles, released successively every two months. The last of these, "Mirai Kinenbi," shared the title of Enomoto's cellphone serialised novel, released through cellphone site Orion at the same time as the single. The offer for Enomoto to write such a novel came to a surprise to her, as she was not an avid fiction reader, and did not consider herself to be an exceptional writer.

Enomoto's break came in late 2008, when she teamed up with Bump of Chicken vocalist Motoo Fujiwara to write the ending theme song for the anime adaptation of the Namco role-playing video game Tales of the Abyss. The resulting song was "Bōken Suisei," which went on to reach #10 on Oricon's singles chart, selling over 30,000 copies.

References

Kurumi Enomoto Wikipedia