I had a really great day today sharing Tokyo with new and old friends from back home. I had recently met R through my recent Melbourne visitor L and I offered to show her around Shimokitazawa today. As we archi kids from Melbourne town are into thrift stores and nostalgic repertoires, Shimokitazawa can be a dangerous place for the precious Japanese yen. I met up with R around midday at Shibuya crossing and we then head onto the Inokashira line bound for 'Shimokit' (as we and C like to refer). For the next two hours or so R and I wandered around a few shops admiring the plethora of interesting things. We had a pleasant drink at The Darwin Room, possibly one of the quaintest shops in the area and it is as it suggests full of botanic books, bugs and bits and bobs in the theme of Charles Darwin. The inbuilt benches against the large front windows made an ideal people watching setting. As I was due to meet B down the road at three, I showed R only the location of other great shops and left her to engange in come solid retail therapy. Reports are a few garments, shoes and collectable records are on their way back to Melbourne.
I then made my way down to Komaba-Todaimae station to meet up with my passionate Portugese maninho, B. The purpose of our exchange was that he is doing me huge favor and lending me his snowboard gear for my upcoming Hokkaido and Niseko adventure. As I waited on the platform rekindling my love affair with Battles (see video) - some serious head bobbing occured - I was then amused to see B running down the street in a rage of energy with the gear on his back. We greeted like lost brothers and then B, a friend of his and myself boarded the train back to Shibuya. B and I discussed his upcoming Australia adventure with great excitement and then parted ways at Shibuya station.
Later that evening, a friend of mine Richard Stampton from Melbourne whom I used to both study under and work for organised to catch up for dinner. http://richardstampton.com/
We decided to meet at a particular 'Starbucks above the concourse' in Shinjuku around 6:30. I arrived at a Starbucks above a concourse
however after 20 minutes or so I began to think we had different
Starbucks in mind (there are a total of 22 in Shinjuku). It was a wrong
doing on my part as my past experience with L at a Shinjuku meet up
point didn't go so well either. I ran around checking other Starbucks
until I gladly found Richard still waiting for me at...a Starbucks above a concourse.
We happily greeted and set off to find a place to eat. I had read up on
a few places to eat before-hand however I wasn't keen on engaging in a
needle in a haystack activity after my subsequent Starbucks "cluster
fuck" (J.K Simmons, Burn After Reading). However amongst our healthy
chatter and aimless wandering we incredibly stumbled across Touch of Spice
a Thai place that I read up on so we headed to the third floor and were
seated immediately. We chatted about his wonderfully hectic trip around
Japan and the many oddities of Japanese culture. After our delicious
meals, we decided to head to a gig at the Pit Inn live house which was
not far. I had checked to see what was on beforehand and was intrigued
by the combination of instruments on the bill.
Michiyo Yagi Double Trio
Michiyo Yagi(20 strings&17 strings Koto,Vocals)
Michiyo Yagi(20 strings&17 strings Koto,Vocals)
Todd Nicholson(Contrabass)
Takashi Sugawa(Contrabass,Cello,Electric Bass)
Tamaya Honda(Drums)
Yasunori Tanaka(Drums)
Michiyo
Yagi, an innovative Koto player who has been overturning the
conventional sense of Koto instrument, combined two leading rhythm
sections in Japanese jazz scene into this unique group. Performing
mainly Yagi’s original pieces that incorporated Japanese music, free
jazz and progressive rock, the double trio played a range of pieces
including the theme music from Seijun Suzuki’s monstrous film ’Branded
to Kill’ (Koroshi no rakuin) and Nick Drake’s ’River Man’ with Yagi’s
radical arrangements. As Richard pointed out, there were also epic
moments that chanelled the Dirty Three. It was by far my most favorite
gig in Japan. Here is some footage of Yagi's skills from the evening that I recorded.
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