Feeling the Tokyo blues

American Delta blues strikes a surprisingly deep chord with many Japanese music fans. In an inhibited and reserved society, the genre's raw and often angry honesty resonates.

Jazz and blues club, Tokyo.
(Image credit: jeremy sutton-hibbert / Alamy Stock Photo)

The curling streets and alleyways of Shimokitazawa, a scrappy neighborhood on the western edge of Tokyo, are too narrow to comfortably accommodate an actual automobile. But on foot, a person can easily lose an afternoon wandering its paths, browsing racks of crinkled vintage T-shirts and shelves of enamel cookware, supping complicated, multi-ingredient cocktails. Tourist guides describe the area as "endearingly haphazard" and "meticulously inelegant." It is, perhaps, a Japanese approximation of Brooklyn's approximation of some bohemian European enclave. Young people congregate in its bars and cafés, fiddling with devices, smoking, looking stylishly aggrieved.

I was in Shimokitazawa to see Steve Gardner, a singer and blues guitarist from Pocahontas, Mississippi, play a tiny club called Lown. American blues performers — purveyors of "black music," as it is known colloquially here — can find good work in Tokyo and its immediate environs. I'd first gleaned something about the Japanese appreciation for specific tributaries of American vernacular music several years ago, when I was reporting a book about collectors of exceptionally rare 78-rpm records.

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