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Yuransen Interview: Stepping Confidently into Adulthood with Their Latest Release

2025.8.21

ゆうらん船『MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE』

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“I can’t stay like this anymore.” That restless feeling drifts through the air. Sometimes it sinks into despair, sometimes it clings to memories like talismans. Yet quietly, it senses that the moment to take the next step is already here. Yuransen’s third album, MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE, captures exactly that tension and urgency.

This might be the album that documents the band stepping into adulthood, venturing into a new world and testing new ground. Until now, Yuransen’s music revolved around the enigmatic yet magnetic songwriter Itaru Uchimura (Vo/Gt), with the band shaping his creations as a collective. On MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE, the creative process has shifted. Kei Sunai (Dr) and Shuwa Nagai (Pf) join as composers, and Takuma Motomura (Ba) takes the reins on mixing. The change began when Uchimura hit a slump, but not the usual “frontman’s struggle.” As he puts it simply, “It’ll work out. It’s okay.”

He also notes, “Yuransen’s sense of place is becoming clearer and clearer.” What has transformed inside the band? And how did MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE become such a captivating and mysterious masterpiece? In conversations with Uchimura and Motomura, the answer revealed itself: a band with quiet, steady vitality and a powerful testament to the magic of creating and living together.

Yuransen as a Safe Haven, Says Motomura

Yuransen’s new album, MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE, marks a shift from their past approach. Instead of simply arranging songs written by Uchimura, the record features compositions by Sunai and Nagai, as well as tracks mixed by Motomura, resulting in a work that feels more collectively created than ever. Listening to the album, it’s easy to sense that mixing has become almost as integral to the songwriting process as composing itself.

Motomura: That’s right. Nowadays, the boundaries between arranging and composing, or between arranging and mixing, are gradually dissolving. In that sense, mixing carries a feeling similar to composing, even if not quite at the same level.

Yuransen
Centered around singer-songwriter Itaru Uchimura (Vo/Gt), who interprets rock, folk, and country in his own unique way, Yuransen also includes Satofumi Ito (Key), Shuwa Nagai (Pf), Takuma Motomura (Ba), and Kei Sunai (Ds). By blending diverse grooves, the band creates a sound that is at once nostalgic, fresh, and thrilling.

Why did the band feel the need to pursue this kind of change?

Uchimura: After finishing our previous album, MY REVOLUTION (2022), I had intended to start writing songs for the next album. But I struggled to create new material. I couldn’t keep up with the pace of production, and even when trying to make an album, there weren’t enough songs. Naturally, the other members started contributing their own compositions from there.

Motomura: When it became clear that Itaru was struggling a bit, Sunai and Nagai stepped in as composers. Both of them have been writing music in their own projects anyway. For us, there was always this unspoken assumption that Yuransen was a band where Itaru Uchimura wrote the songs. But then we realized, ‘Wait, the other members can write too.’ That felt like a very natural progression. Looking back now, it’s already our third album, and I think the band must have been ready for some kind of change.

Uchimura: Yes, that’s right.

“Departure,” composed by Nagai
From left: Itaru Uchimura (Vo / Gt), Takuma Motomura (Ba)

Do you feel that the change in how the songs are created has altered Yuransen’s role or meaning for you as a band?

Motomura: Not at all. For me, Yuransen has always been a stable and reassuring place. The band even acts as a kind of emotional barometer. If I ever feel down about Yuransen, it’s not because the band is struggling—it’s probably because I am. No matter how off I feel, I rarely think, “The band is out of sync.” That’s the level of trust I have in this group.

Uchimura: Musically, each of the five of us has very different tastes, and we’re all pretty even-tempered. Since we come from such different worlds, moods don’t spread in a weird way.

Motomura: Exactly. Everyone maintains their own “normal” state. Just because one person is feeling low, it doesn’t drag the others down. Each of us keeps our own pace and energy. In that sense, it’s a really rare kind of community. Sometimes friends from other bands ask me, “How do you create Yuransen’s sense of calm?” And I just have to laugh and say, “There’s nothing to it.” It’s not something you can really explain.

Uchimura: This time, Sunai created the overall framework for the album and also thought about the song order and thematic elements. With Sunai able to take an overarching view of the band, Motomura handling the mixing, and me focusing on the lyrics, each of us had our own role. Yuransen has this kind of dynamic where everyone can exist independently within the group. I feel that the band’s identity as a “place” becomes clearer with each project. Because of that, our trust in one another keeps growing, and we’ve naturally learned how to divide responsibilities and leave things to each other with confidence.

“Carry Me To Heaven (Accelerated),” composed by Sunai

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