Dream
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Dream
Summary
Dream is a girl group[1]. Dream draws 296 Wikipedia views per month (girl_group category, ranking #122 of 303).[2]
Key Facts
- Dream's instance of is recorded as girl group[3].
- Dream's genre is pop music[4].
- Dream's genre is J-pop[5].
- Dream's genre is synth-pop[6].
- Dream's genre is dance-pop[7].
- Dream's record label is recorded as Avex Trax[8].
- Dream's record label is recorded as Rhythm Zone[9].
- Dream's discography is recorded as Dream discography[10].
- Dream's country of origin is recorded as Japan[11].
- Dream comprises Sayaka Yamamoto[12].
- Dream comprises Dream Ami[13].
- Dream comprises Aya Takamoto[14].
- Dream comprises Shizuka Nishida[15].
- Dream comprises Erie Abe[16].
- Dream comprises Kana Tachibana[17].
- Dream comprises Yu Hasebe[18].
- Dream comprises Risa Ai[19].
- Dream comprises Mai Matsumuro[20].
- January 1, 2000 marks the founding of Dream[21].
- Dream was dissolved in July 16, 2017[22].
- Dream's official website is recorded as http://www.dream-ldh.jp/[23].
- Dream's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Dream (Japanese group)[24].
- Dream's topic has template is recorded as Template:Dream (Japanese group)[25].
- Dream's name in kana is recorded as ドリーム[26].
- Dream's represented by is recorded as LDH[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
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Type: Group[28]
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Country: JP[29]
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Began / founded: 2000-01-01[30]
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Ended / dissolved: 2017-07-16[31]
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Genre(s): dance-pop, electropop, eurobeat, j-pop[32]
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Community tags: dance-pop, electropop, eurobeat, girl group, j-pop[33]
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MusicBrainz ID: 52aaceb8-6053-4130-ad98-1968be62e2c2[34]
Body
Founding
January 1, 2000 marks the founding of Dream[21].
Dissolution
Dream was dissolved in July 16, 2017[22].
Why It Matters
Dream draws 296 Wikipedia views per month (girl_group category, ranking #122 of 303).[2] Dream has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] Dream is known by 15 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]