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Paul Fisher
For Paul Fisher's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Dec 26, 2000
The best of this year's world music crop
Strangely, I had thought this year was not a particularly vintage one for world and roots music. That was until I had to whittle down a list to come up with a top 10, as part of a panel for the British magazine fRoots.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Dec 12, 2000
The best of the year that was
The concert scene in Japan tends to slow down a bit in the winter months, so this week I'll present my pick of this year's Japanese releases, and in my next column, releases from around the world.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Nov 28, 2000
Cuban musical wave keeps on coming
At the beginning of next year, not much will have changed from this year, when it comes to the pick of world and roots music concerts. More Cubans!
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Nov 14, 2000
The last of the best from Cuba
Even after 10 years, I still find it difficult to predict what actually turns Japanese world-music fans on.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Oct 24, 2000
Okinawan sounds old and new resonate through the mainland
For a reason that has so far confounded me, October and November usually herald a spate of Okinawan concerts and releases on the mainland, leading to unfortunate clashes of dates. This year is no exception: The Ryukyu Festival in Tokyo (previewed in this column) in early October unfortunately fell on the same day as two other excellent Okinawan performances elsewhere.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Oct 9, 2000
Festival highlights the myriad sounds of Africa
The South African province of KwaZulu-Natal, I was told upon my arrival, has everything, from snowboarding in the morning to surfing in the afternoon. And from the itinerary that Swize, from the local tourist board, handed me, it looked like I would be doing it all: a trip to a game reserve and a Zulu village; a tour of the townships and Oribi Gorge; micro-lighting over the Valley of a Thousand Hills; whale- and dolphin-watching; and so on.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Sep 26, 2000
Voices of power and purity lilting out of Africa
I seem to see certain of my favorite African musicians whenever I take a trip away from Japan. I have now seen Senegal's Cheikh Lo in several European cities and in Co^te d'Ivoire, and am about to see him again at a festival in South Africa.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Sep 12, 2000
Intercultural influences
East-West fusions are nothing new. Nearly 100 years ago, some Western classical music was influenced by Indian classical or Javanese gamelan music. In the 1950s, violinist Yehudi Menuhin performed with Indian sarod player Ali Akbar Khan and sitar maestro Ravi Shankar. By the 1960s, John Coltrane was exploring Indian music, while Shankar's star pupil, George Harrison, was bringing Indian music to a global audience through the Beatles.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Aug 22, 2000
Shang Shang Typhoon blowing back in to devastate main islands
At the start of the 1990s, when "world music" became a generally accepted term, some Japanese started to look at themselves and wonder what their own country had to offer -- not only in Japan but to the rest of the world.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Aug 8, 2000
Keepers of the flame take Gypsy sounds to the world
Under Soviet communism, the ethnic and folk music of Eastern Europe was often hijacked as a form of propaganda. Words were changed to express patriotic sentiments and slogans of peace. In Romania, Nicolae Ceausescu, the country's dictator for 25 years, would bus out thousands of peasants to sing such sentiments in picturesque hills to be filmed and shown on television every Sunday.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Jul 25, 2000
From the streets of Tokyo to Royal Albert Hall
The night before they left for Europe, Japanese group Cicala Mvta (pronounced Chicala Muta) played for about 50 people in Tokyo -- about par for the course for them. When they arrived in London the next day, theirs was the hottest ticket in town. Sort of.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Jul 11, 2000
Reverberations of a sonic boom
The live scene for world and roots music in Japan, especially for those living in Tokyo, has never been so healthy. This year, many top artists from Cuba, Eastern Europe, the Celtic countries, Northern Europe, Brazil and Africa have already visited or will be visiting Japan -- a situation almost unthinkable even one year ago.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Jun 27, 2000
Different tunings, same brilliance
Two exceptional American guitarists visit Japan next month. Although at opposite ends of the spectrum in style, background and geography, both operate firmly outside the mainstream, share a desire to innovate and produce music that can be at once both meditative and challenging.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Jun 13, 2000
Beyond the Buena Vista Social Club
Ever felt you missed out on an opportunity? When working as a talent scout for a record company in the U.K., I once stumbled upon U2 in the band's infancy. Somehow negotiations never got started and they were soon snapped up elsewhere. After that, in U2's words, I never did find what I was looking for.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
May 23, 2000
Have guitars, will travel -- extensively across Europe
Hurtling toward Vienna on the German autobahns, I have two passengers. One is Okinawan, Takashi Hirayasu. The other, Bob Brozman, is American. Both are playing Bolivian charangos to pass the time, which makes for an interesting multicultural soundtrack for driving. Something like Indian Ocean rhythms and Okinawan melodies played with a Mexican flourish and a hint of the blues. Sure beats the radio.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
May 9, 2000
Dr. John carries the torch, while Lenine fans the flames
Dr. John has worn a lot of musical hats during his 45-year career. Born Malcolm John Rebennack Jr. in New Orleans in 1940, he was soon deep in the local music scene, playing guitar with many top R&B acts before switching to piano and forming his own group. Taking the music of the Crescent City as his base, funk, rock 'n' roll, R&B, psychedelic rock, blues and jazz have been added over the years to the Dr. John blender of music cocktails.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Apr 25, 2000
Virtuosos from the fringes of Europe
Perhaps it's still too early to be talking about gigs of the year but the upcoming Altan Festival might prove hard to beat. There will be three outstanding acts. All come from the fringes of Europe, from peoples with a history of persecution, but all have an equally long and proud music tradition that is colorful and exciting.
CULTURE / Music / MUSIC NOMAD
Apr 11, 2000
Femi, from Fuji to Tokyo
In Nigeria there is a music called Fuji. In the early 1990s, Fuji was the most popular music in Nigeria. The music's originator, Sikiru Barrister, named it after seeing a postcard of Mount Fuji. He said it was the most beautiful mountain he had ever seen, and dreamed of playing or recording in view of it.
CULTURE / Music
Mar 28, 2000
Tried and true not always the way to go
As mentioned last time in this column, a new restaurant/venue, Tribute to the Love Generation, will open in Odaiba on Tokyo Bay next month. It is not, as you may expect, a hangout for "Dead-heads," or ex-flower power hippies hiding out in Tokyo, but in fact will host mainly "world music" concerts. With the rising popularity of acoustic and roots-based music in Japan, a new venue is certainly most welcome. However, I do have my reservations about TLG (let's just call it that).
CULTURE / Music
Mar 14, 2000
Celtic music takes a sure-footed stand in Tokyo
For anyone interested in "world music," gigs in Japan have been comparatively thin on the ground during the last five years or so, compared to the first years of the '90s. This is a situation that is perhaps set to change.

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