Li Jianhong’s Japan Diaries, Days Five and Six

by Ben

So much for my goal of finishing these translations by the end of the year…

Happy New Year!

December 13, 2006
Today’s performance was at the UFO Club, and judging from the name alone, you can tell it’s a psychedelic rock venue. It’s also located in a basement, and the stairway down to the entrance is plastered with posters advertising concerts and recruiting musicians. I was surprised to discover that the boss here is the same guy who runs Show Boat.

We arrived there early, and the club still wasn’t open, so we just left our instruments, suitcases, and laptops at the door along with a note. Then we went to check out a street specializing in second-hand stores. There were second-hand books, albums, clothes, and home furnishings. Itta and Marqido especially dug into any shops that had red clothing, ha ha. They pay great attention to their appearance on stage; if it’s not red, they’re not interested.

There were a lot of interesting old books, including authors such as Shuji Terayama 寺山修司 and Araki Nobuyoshi 荒木经惟. In one used bookstore named Nishimuraya 西村屋, which also sells a great quantity of second-hand videotapes and DVD’s, I also saw books by Daisetsu T. Suzuki 铃木大拙. They weren’t expensive, but considering that I don’t read Japanese, I decided not to buy anything.

At 4:30 in the afternoon we went back to the UFO Club, where Shoji Hano was already sound checking his drums. Today before our duo free improvisation, I was scheduled to do a solo set. He said today he was ready to record, so he hoped that we could get a better balance between our playing volumes this time.

After waiting for all of the performers to finish sound checking, it was just about show time. Hideo Ikeezumi and Munehiro Narita had also come to check out the performance.

The first to perform was a newly formed Tokyo psychedelic punk band named AINOTAMENISHIS 愛のために死す. They had some pretty good songs, reminding me of the Beijing band Mafeisan 麻沸散. But they played a bit long, more than an hour; waiting for them to finish, Shoji Hano ran over to me and said that since they were playing so long, maybe I could curtail my solo performance a bit, if we still wanted to do our duo improvisation. I said no problem.

Next up was 10, and tonight they put on a great show, better than two days ago at Show Boat. But after they were done, my performance was really a disaster. Halfway through my solo set, I had a sudden recurrence of an old malady. My left hand cramped up to the point where I couldn’t hold down the strings, and my right hand couldn’t even hold my guitar pick. I was so emotionally pumped up that I couldn’t even stand steady, and I stumbled on the stage. After I was done, there was no time for a break, since the next set was my duo improvisation with Shoji Hano. My two hands were already completely stiff, and there was no longer any joy in playing, so the concert was very rigid and mechanical, with no chance for anything truly creative or inspired to happen. But Shoji Hano was great, just crazier and crazier; when I was ready to leave the stage, he called me back for more.

As far as I’m concerned, today’s performance was a complete mess. Sitting in the green room after the show, I just wanted to chop off my two hands. I utterly despise this old illness, which has so many times robbed me of the joy of performing. Of course Hideo Ikeezumi was also disappointed, since he was hoping to get a good recording of tonight’s show, but the result was far from ideal.

Afterwards someone came over to greet me. When he introduced himself, I realized it was Shizuo Uchida 内田静男, the bass player in Keiji Haino’s 灰野敬二 Nijiumu 滲有無 project. He also came to hear our performance two days ago at Show Boat. He was the one who designed the artwork for the PSF re-release of the D!O!D!O!D! album. We exchanged contact information, and he gave me a copy of the Shizuo Hasegawa 長谷川静男 CD he did together with Hirotomo Hasegawa 長谷川裕倫. I also gave him a few 2pi CD’s.

Just before we left, Hideo Ikeezumi gave us 5000 yen to go get a late night snack, as well as 10000 yen to pay for our trip to Osaka. What a great boss!

Today was such a tiring day. When we got home, I could only lie paralyzed on the bed. Itta brewed some pomelo honey tea for me to drink. This is a Korean specialty that she had just brought with her a few days ago, and it was extremely tasty. These last few days, this tea has become our best cure for staving off exhaustion. Two cups down the hatch, OK, the day’s work is behind us, and we’re ready for bed. Tomorrow we’re off to Osaka!

December 14, 2006
“Life’s got more twists and turns for the poor [穷人多折腾].” This is a famous saying for Marqido and me. Translated into the best English that the two of us could manage, it means, “Poor is hard, rich is easy.” Maybe it’s not grammatically correct, but if you understand the meaning, that’s enough. I’ve known him for two years, and between the two of us, we don’t know more than fifteen words of English.

“Poor is hard, rich is easy,” was in reference to the fact that the direct bullet train from Tokyo to Osaka, which only takes three and a half hours, costs 15000 yen, too much for our budget. In the end, we had to leave at 6:30 in the morning and change trains about seven or eight times, ultimately taking nine hours to reach Osaka.

But all this trouble was worth it. Although all these twists and turns meant that there was no chance for sleep on the train, the journey gave me a taste of some beautiful Japanese scenery, including Mount Fuji, the Pacific Ocean, several small villages nestled at the foot of the mountain, the tidy and tranquil countryside, and the kind of wild fields you’d see in a film by Hayao Miyazaki 宮崎駿. Large statues of Guanyin (a.k.a. Avelokitsvara, the Buddhist goddess of mercy), dotted the hillsides we passed along the way.

We arrived in Osaka in the afternoon around 4 pm and went straight to BEARS bar. This is Osaka’s performing holy ground, opened by the famous guitarist Seiichi Yamamoto 山本精一. All of the big name noise artists (or any kind of big name artists) who come to Osaka play here as their first choice venue. Tokyo may be Japan’s capital for psychedelic music, but Osaka is the noise music capital. This bar’s also not very big and also located in the basement; I’m realizing that basically all of Japan’s music bars are underground. The sound engineer was a young girl, but very experienced and fast-working, the most deft and precise sound engineer I’ve seen. When I was sound checking, she asked if I wanted more treble or bass, so I replied, “More bass,” and very quickly she had dialed up a satisfying tone. The audio equipment was also quite good; if you want to really crank it up, this wish is easily satisfied.

Before the performance, Koyuki 小雪, the manager of Super Sonic China, arrived. I met her a few years ago in Hangzhou. She is now in Japan acting as an agent and promoter for the Shanshui 山水 record label run by Sun Dawei 孙大威 (a.k.a. Sulumi). She also organized our other Osaka performance. Her Chinese is really good, and the other friends who accompanied her, including Iida 饭田 and Tanaka 田中, also speak Chinese. I was so happy that I could finally use Chinese to communicate with people!

The first act to take the stage tonight was pretty good, Tetsuharu Mashita 増田哲治, performing guitar noise processed with delays, loops, and feedback, very psychedelic, with some ear-splitting high frequencies. After the show, he told me he made effects processors. No wonder his music had such an original tone!

Next up was 10. I’ve already seen them perform many times, but I can always discover some new impression. Japanese artists and musicians all have a very persistent quality. Once they have chosen some mode of expression, they seem compelled to drill down deep to the heart of the matter. Because only then is it your own music, one that is totally unique. 10 also possess this quality, the idea that you’ve got to have something that’s your own; this is what touched me most deeply while I was in Japan. You might say that the proliferation of different forms of creative music in Osaka is the proof.

Next was my performance. I still hadn’t recovered the full use of my hands, so I couldn’t play guitar. Instead I chose to do a hardware noise set of “rubbing box” [a small, custom-made box that generates noise when rubbed] plus effects. The performance turned out alright, since the sound in that room was so good; all of the minute details and variations could be heard clearly. Since I pressed down so hard on the rubbing box, I actually broke off a corner of the table on which I was performing. When Seiichi Yamamoto came over to help me move my equipment off the stage, I apologized to him, but he said it was no big deal, and took a look at my rubbing box while he was at it.

The last performance was by a super prankish band, two guys and one girl, performing on keyboard plus a huge drum, along with Japanese comic dialog, very interesting.

When the concert was over, Seiichi Yamamoto gave us eight thousand yen to get us back to Tokyo, and Koyuki and her friends invited us out for some food. This meal was great; I particularly love those barbecued apricots, so fragrant. While in Osaka, we were staying at Iida’s place, so after eating, we headed back there to sleep. Iida is a very warm-hearted Japanese guy, very sincere. He studied in China for a while, so we were able to chat together quite happily.

Going to Iida’s house was my first time taking a Japanese taxi, since they’re so expensive. Even a short trip makes about 2000 yen just disappear. Marqido jokingly pointed to Iida from the back seat and said “Rich people! Rich people!”

What a great day this was: great scenery, great performances, great food, great friends…itta said today must have been my happiest day in Japan so far, since she was always seeing me smile.




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