author

 
 

Meta

Twitter

@philipbrasor

Philip Brasor
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Apr 24, 2005
Documenting hell on Earth: At a theater near you
Because of the dangerous situation there, none of the commercial Japanese TV networks have staff correspondents in Iraq. On-site reporting that's shown on Japanese TV is from either other countries' news organizations or freelance Japanese reporters, the most prominent of whom is probably Takeharu Watai,...
CULTURE / Music
Apr 24, 2005
Hacienda Brothers: "Hacienda Brothers"
Vocalist Chris Gaffney, who has been kicking around the Southwest country-western scene for 25 years, and Dave Gonzalez, former guitarist for the rockabilly-blues band The Paladins, call the music they make as the Tucson-based Hacienda Brothers "western soul." Gaffney's baritone teeters somewhere between...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Apr 17, 2005
Cristina Branco
Agenuine late bloomer, Cristina Branco reportedly had never listened to fado, the most famous popular music form of her native Portugal, until she was 18 and her grandfather loaned her a record by Amalia Rodrigues, Portugal's greatest singer. Like most Portuguese who grew up in middle-class comfort following...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Apr 17, 2005
Prime Minister Koizumi smiles in the face of the people's apathy
No matter how alarming the day's news is, you can always count on Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to put a happy face on it. In the daily press conferences where he sidles up to journalists to field a few softballs he always has a way of making everything sound inconsequential.
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Apr 10, 2005
Corporate deregulation: Fear, loathing, firms losing the plot
Ever since the Japanese government started deregulating the economy in the '90s, there has been talk of an emerging income gap (kakusa). To a country that likes to think of itself as being uniformly middle class, social stratification means trouble, since it is often related to increasing crime, alienation,...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Apr 10, 2005
Hood creeping out of the shadows
Almost 15 years after deciding to make music under the mysterious sounding moniker Hood, brothers Chris and Richard Adams have released the widely appreciated "Outside Closer," their ninth album overall and fourth for Domino, perhaps the hippest U.K. label at the moment. Given the fickleness of the music...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Apr 10, 2005
Keren Ann: "Nolita"
Last summer, Keren Ann Zeidel, who was born in Israel and raised in Paris, built on the cosmopolitan rep she's developed over several French-language albums of quiet singer-songwriter pop with the all-English "Not Going Anywhere," her first CD to be released outside of France.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Apr 3, 2005
Brazilian Girls: "Brazilian Girls"
Is there a genre name as pointlessly generic as World Beat? This common gripe, in fact, is the conceptual brainstorm behind the heady appeal of Brazilian Girls, a quartet of New York-based club musicians none of whom are Brazilian and only one of whom is a girl. Though they dabble in bossa nova, they...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Apr 3, 2005
So much food that we don't know what to do with it
The media didn't quite know what to make of that bizarre story last month about the elderly Sapporo man who allegedly killed his wife following a dinnertime spat. One might expect a husband to become angry over not getting enough food, TV commentators implied, but in this case the situation was the opposite....
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Mar 27, 2005
Erykah Badu
When Erica Wright changed her name to Erykah Badu, donned exotic headgear, and staked her place among the crowd of new female soul singers in the late '90s, her voice was compared favorably to Billie Holiday's; and while the compliment helped her gain some critical distinction, it was about as helpful...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 27, 2005
Ten years of tero in Japan: Notes on usage
Japanese language purists carp about the surfeit of katakana, but as with all cultural manifestations, from bossa nova to breakfast cereals, the Japanese manage to make these linguistic borrowings their own in an unmistakable way, the most obvious being abbreviation.
Japan Times
JAPAN / Media
Mar 23, 2005
Duty calls
Special to The Japan Times In the United States, it's said that the Vietnam War was lost on TV. As the first armed conflict to receive graphic coverage on nightly news shows, the war seemed closer than it was. Consequently, questions surrounding its legitimacy eventually came to the fore and, for many...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Mar 20, 2005
Scott Herren
Many major American hip-hop artists profess admiration and even envy for the experimental glitch mastery of the European electronica artists who make up the roster of Warp records. If there's a missing link between the two sensibilities it's probably Atlanta native Scott Herren, who records for Warp...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 20, 2005
Training men in sex education is the key to unlock women-only cars
On the same day that now former Liberal Democratic Party lawmaker Kazuyoshi Nakanishi was arrested for indecent assault in Roppongi there was a similarly themed news story buried in the back of the dailies that put his misdemeanor in perspective. Officials of JR East Japan announced that they are planning...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Mar 13, 2005
Sibling rivalry fans the creative flames
Matthew and Eleanor Friedberger, the brother-sister duo known as Fiery Furnaces, have become the standard bearers of underground progressive rock by reviving the idea that albums can be complete, integrated pop works unto themselves. In this age of institutionalized short attention spans and the iPod...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 13, 2005
Fuji TV in a Horie to distance itself from IT man
Next month, Fuji TV will launch another batch of up-to-the-minute trendy drama series. Among them is one called "Koi ni Ochitara/Boku no Seiko no Himitsu (Falling in Love/The Secret of My Success)" starring SMAP member Tsuyoshi Kusanagi as a young man who, after his small family-run factory goes bankrupt,...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 6, 2005
People are so funny about their paper money
Every so often there's a big news story about someone finding a huge amount of money in the unlikeliest of places. The most recent one had to do with tens of millions of yen in cash discovered in a stream in Hasuda, Saitama Prefecture.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Feb 27, 2005
Dalek
One rarely hears the term "underground rock" used any more, since the breakdown of the traditional indie/major dichotomy has rendered any stylistic notions attached to the term pointless. However, the term underground hip-hop is still very much in use, probably because mainstream hip-hop is such a slave...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Feb 27, 2005
Lay judges could put many fears of the legal system to rest
In a survey carried out by the Cabinet Office last December, 81 percent of respondents said they supported the death penalty, with 53 percent saying they believe serious crimes would increase without it. The Justice Ministry has repeatedly pointed to public support for capital punishment as a main reason...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Feb 20, 2005
Ah-choo! Picked up an allergy to the hay-fever industry
Last week the pharmaceutical company Riken announced that it was developing a new desensitivity treatment for serious allergy sufferers. The treatment program would entail fifty or so injections over a three-year period, which is quite a reduction in time. I should know. I received biweekly or monthly...

Longform

Construction takes place on the Takanawa Gateway Convention Center in Tokyo, slated to open in 2025.
A boom for business tourism in Japan?