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Philip Brasor
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 30, 2003
War in Iraq puts Ishihara on the defensive
When Tokyo Gov. Shintaro Ishihara finally announced March 7 his intention to run for re-election, some people in the media speculated that it was the end of the colorful politician-novelist's aspirations for national office.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Mar 26, 2003
Libertines
Many rock bands want you to think they work and live outside normal society. London's Libertines are no different, but in their case it's as if they've never been in normal society in the first place. Last June, they cracked the British Top 40 with "What a Waster," a short, crass song that treats drug...
Japan Times
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 23, 2003
Japan's dumb leaders fail to exercise tongues
In the weeks leading up to the invasion of Iraq, it was common for reporters throughout the world to sample public opinion about it. As journalism, man-on-the-street interviews are more or less a sideshow, since, depending on the country, they offer little of substance in terms of information. Americans,...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Mar 19, 2003
Radio 4: "Gotham"
The new dance-punk that's been coming out of Brooklyn the past year or so has mostly been produced by out-of-towners. As one of the few affordable bohemian enclaves left in New York City, the borough attracts a sizable number of fledgling rock bands looking to make names for themselves.
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 16, 2003
'Bogus' theme parks becoming the last resort
On Jan. 23, Tokyo Disneyland held a preview event for the media in anticipation of the park's 20th anniversary, which will be celebrated April 15. About 1,400 celebrity guests showed up trailed by 50 camera crews, all from domestic television stations, which means that most of them were from outside...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Mar 12, 2003
Califone's "Quicksand/Cradlesnakes"
...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 9, 2003
Yayori Matsui's legacy lives on -- as intended
Last weekend, a memorial gathering was held in Waseda for Yayori Matsui, the former Asahi Shimbun reporter and women's rights advocate, who died in December from liver cancer at the age of 68. A proper funeral service had been held two months earlier at the Shibuya church founded by Matsui's minister...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Mar 5, 2003
Not just another pretty spaz
Singer-songwriter Rhett Miller, who is in Tokyo for a few days plugging his album "The Instigator" is feeing encouraged. "I told my manager I wanted to come back in May with a band," he says between sips of green tea at the offices of Warner Music Japan. During a solo acoustic showcase the night before...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Mar 5, 2003
Definitive Jux
When Rawkus Records and Quannum Projects were sucked into Universal's corporate black hole last year, the breadth of so-called underground hip-hop shrank considerably. Whatever such a grab means for music in general, it inadvertently boosted the street cred of the scene's most aggressively indie label,...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Mar 2, 2003
In pursuit of 'reality,' TV sinks to new depths
Last week, a judge ruled in favor of NHK in the public broadcaster's libel suit against Kodansha. The publisher's monthly magazine Gendai ran an article in Oct. 2000 that said NHK persuaded fishermen in Indonesia to re-create a method for catching fish involving explosives for a news report. The court...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Feb 26, 2003
The Go-Betweens: "Bright Yellow Bright Orange"
At a time and in a place where the jangly iconoclasm of The Smiths held sway, the off-center pop songs of the Go-Betweens should have been chart contenders, but the group's popularity never grew beyond a cult. Some attribute the cool response to the fact that they were strangers in a strange land; Aussies...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Feb 23, 2003
You can be yourself, but not be understood
Identity has as much to do with socialization as it does with the circumstances surrounding one's birth. But since gender is considered an absolute, it has become the test of a society's willingness to allow its members to identify themselves. Except for hermaphrodites, humans are either male or female,...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Feb 19, 2003
Liars: "They Threw Us In a Trench and Stuck a Monument on Top"
It takes more talent than guts to defy categorization, but Liars, an art-punk quartet based in Brooklyn, has done so seemingly through sheer force of will. Out of the band's blend of angular beats, grating effects, compressed vocals, and nonlinear song structures comes a recognizable sonic manifesto...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Feb 16, 2003
Don't be too quick to jump on the bondwagon
Two weeks ago, post offices and financial institutions began taking orders for new Japanese government bonds targeted exclusively at individuals and set to go on sale March 10. Post offices immediately booked sales for all 50 billion yen worth of bonds they were entrusted with, and the remaining 280...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Feb 16, 2003
Songs of the sorta rich and famous
Daniel Johnston is apparently napping. His father, Bill, who answers the phone, says to someone, "Tell Dan it's his interview from Japan."
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Feb 12, 2003
Kathleen Edwards: Failer
Singer-songwriters who take the confessional route run the risk of alienating listeners when they invite them into their psyches. Personality problems and moral inconsistencies are bound to be noticed. That's why so many artists hide their nakedness behind self-deprecation.
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Feb 9, 2003
Yasukuni issue going to the dogs in Japan
When Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi was in Moscow last month to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, he found he had a little time on his hands. According to reports in several weeklies, Koizumi originally planned to spend one day in the Siberian city of Khabarovsk talking to North Korean leader...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music / HIGH NOTES
Feb 5, 2003
Fennesz
The Austrian guitarist Christian Fennesz has made a name for himself in the rarefied worlds of ambient and avant-garde electronica with what could be called acoustic music, a preference that prompted one Japanese writer to describe his art as "laptop folk." Fennesz retains the clarity of his acoustic...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Feb 5, 2003
The song remains the same . . . sorta
2001 marked the 10th anniversary of the release of "Nevermind," the album that broke alternative rock on non-college radio and MTV. Owing to disagreements among the interests that control the Nirvana legacy, the anticipated career-survey box set was never released. Instead, a single-disc greatest hits...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Feb 2, 2003
Can 007 fire up the Japanese on N. Korea?
As North Korea's threatening bluster continues to make international headlines, it seems almost bizarre that Japan, which would be in direct physical peril if a conflict erupted on the Korean Peninsula, has its mind on something else, namely Japanese citizens abducted by North Korean agents. Though important,...

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