In the climb of his fame, producer Komuro organized one of his castings, searching for new singers in 1994 (especially one that was called Eurogroove Night).
The young girl Keiko Yamada assisted, encouraged by her friends, and her voice undoubtedly attracted Komuro's attention instantly.
Another one of the careers that TK was thinking about producing at that time was that of the model and MTV VJ Marc Panther, who knew English and French as well as from Japanese.
Komuro finally had the idea to make a band using Yamada and Panther as main vocalists and himself as keyboard player and also some vocals.
To promote it, the band began their its large scale tour called Globe@4Domes in which they performed at the four biggest Japanese domes: Osaka, Fukuoka, Nagoya and Tokyo.
A few months later, the band began its first overseas tour around Asia with Namie Amuro and TRF, also from the Komuro stable.
The first big step in this new era was the "Globe Featuring" project in 2000, in which each member of the band released one single as a solo artist.
In July 2002, Globe and the Belgian DJ Push collaborated on the single "Dreams From Above" for the set of Avex's Cyber Trance series.
Keiko" (a limited edition deluxe box contained every single, album and DVD ever released by the band).
In 2005, after the two-year hiatus, Globe returned to the musical scene with a new single called "Here I Am" (used as the opening theme of the Black Jack anime), and in August of that year released their ninth studio album Globe2 Pop/Rock to commemorate their 11th anniversary.
Latin American musical influences were the main theme of the mini-album, in which Spanish-language phrases were added to songs for the first time.
Two new singles were originally set to be released in 2008, covers of TM Network's songs "Get Wild" and "Self Control", but these were cancelled by Avex because of Komuro's fraud controversy.
On June 28, 2017, Globe returned without Yamada and appeared during a televised show to perform with the singer Hiroko Shimabukuro of Speed.
On August 15, Komuro posted on his Instagram a video in which Yamada can be heard interpreting an unpublished song, "Keiko 2016–2017".
Shortly after this was reported, Komuro announced his retirement from the music industry, thus essentially putting an end to Globe, among his other projects.