Tag Archives: Tokyo

What Do Memories Sound Like?

On a business trip to Japan in 1991 I was to meet an American in the lobby of an office building in Tokyo. I arrived about 15 minutes before the scheduled time, 8 am,  because. . .well because it seemed like a good idea that if you’re going to travel to the other side of the world and have an appointment, you don’t want to miss it. Oddly, it was me and a guy working a floor buffer in the lobby until the top of the hour, when suddenly (OK, I was still somewhat jet-lagged) there were people everywhere and the person I was meeting introduced himself to me. He was in his mid-20s and his genuineness and demeanor brought to mind an adult Opie from the “Andy Griffith Show,” and this characterization is not to be perceived as in anyway reductive; he was optimistic, engaging and there was the whiff of apple pie about him.

He negotiated us through Tokyo Station, which was a churning ocean of gray-suited businessmen rushing somewhere. Somehow he slipped through without delay with me trying to stay in his wake.

We sat on a train talking about this and that; he was interested in what was going on back home mainly. We had to change trains in Hamamatsu, where he took me to an Indian restaurant, which seemed odd to me until I realized that the distance from Tokyo to Mumbai is a hell of a lot shorter than that from Detroit than either of those locales. Ordering in the restaurant was a matter of simply pointing at models of food and while the models may have been dimensionally accurate, there was something slightly off about the coloring, as there always seemed, regardless of the type of food served in a restaurant, to have a certain whisper of fluorescence about it.

When we arrived in Nagoya and walked from the train station to our destination, we entered the lobby of an office building and went to the desk where there was a man whose job it was to check people in. Opie started speaking Japanese to him which was shocking to me because I’d only heard him talk in a voice with a slight Virginian accent and there it was, full-on, a language that has something of an insistence about it coming from him.

On the train back to Tokyo he explained to me that after getting a degree in history from William and Mary he decided that he wanted to go to Japan, despite not knowing the language. He moved into the home of a family who knew no English. By living with them he learned the language with a proficiency such that he was hired by one of the leading Japanese companies.

During that train ride we started talking about music. At one point he said that he’d just gotten a CD from a comparatively new band that he thought was great who he caught on tour there in Japan. The album is Gala by Lush.

I had never heard of the band. When I got back home I thought that he had an exceptional ear—after all, anyone who could pick up a language like that had something special about him—and so bought a copy of the disc.

I listened to it. I enjoyed it. I forgot about it.

So where is this going?

Back to Japan some 30 years ago.

Continue reading What Do Memories Sound Like?

New Phoenix video: “Tonight” (ft. Ezra Koenig)

Video: Phoenix – “Tonight” (ft. Ezra Koenig)

Directed by Oscar Boyson. From Alpha Zulu, out November 4.

Am I just getting old or have all the years before 2020 become a hazy blur? I remember when “Oxford Comma” and “Lisztomania” were new and exciting (and I still love those songs), but the time since then has all blended together. Well, leave it to Phoenix and Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig to make it seem like it was only yesterday.

Not sure what exactly Koenig brings to the table here, since I’m sure Thomas Mars could’ve sung those parts himself and we’d barely notice the difference. But he certainly makes the video more fun with a split-screen showing him checking out the least Japanese parts of Tokyo while Mars and his band navigate the streets and puddles of Paris.

Let’s roll!