Japanese rock is the Japanese form of rock and roll music, often abbreviated to "J-Rock" or "jrock", as "J-Pop" and "jpop" are used as an abbreviation of Japanese Pop. J-Rock is one of the most popular forms of music in its native Japan.
Psychedelic rock first appeared in Japan in the mid to late 1960s. A few Group Sounds bands, including The Golden Cups, The Tempters, The Mops, The Dynamites and Jacks (whose "Karappo No Sekai" and "Marianne" were two of the first psychedelic recordings from the country) imitated their Anglo heros.
Like in the UK and US, the psychedelic rock scene was linked to a political movement involving young, spirited students. An economic boom brought many young people to universities, where radical politics abounded. Central to this movement, arising from the late 60s Kyoto student revolts, was the band Les Rallizes Denudés and the Taj Mahal Travellers, followed by Lost Aaraaff (whose lineup included notable avant-garde musician, Keiji Haino).
A fringe movement from the late 1980s in Japanese alternative rock took the form of noise rock, a sound popularised by bands such as Boredoms.
A book on J-Rock titled jrock, ink.: a concise report on 40 of the biggest rock acts in Japan by author Josephine Yun was released in the autumn of 2005. The book features profiles, discographies and illustrations of some of the most popular Jrock artists of yesterday and today.
An English language print magazine entitled jrock ink magazine was announced in January 2006, promising to continue the propagation of J-Rock in Western countries.
Japanese music | Rock music by nationality
J-Rock | J-Rock | Rock japonais | רוק יפני | %E6%97%A5%E6%9C%AC%E3%81%AE%E3%83%AD%E3%83%83%E3%82%AF | J-rock | Japanese rock | J-rock | 日系摇滚