Friday May 9th, 2008 | Posted in Music

Jungle in the Park

Last Sunday, and the Sunday before that, I went to Yoyogi Park with a couple of friends. We were going to come from Harajuku and check out the Harajuku girls, the Gothic Lolitas, the Punks, the Rockabillys, and other sights at the entrance to the park. After that we skirted the park in the direction of Shibuya, staying on the pavement that circumnavigates the boundry. Along the way we were checking out J-Pop bands, solo singers and street sellers who gather there every week.

It wasn’t until further on that we started to hear loud bass lines from up ahead. We carried on a bit further, rounded a corner, and then came to a wide area on the pavement where there was an entrance leading into the park. In the entrance there was literally, a wall of sound. Cabinet speakers piled up into a stack. The turntables were facing this about 10 metres away. This, apparently, was the free outdoor party at Yoyogi put on by the DJ’s from Champion Bass.

They were playing all English music, from London and Bristol’s dub and reggae influenced Jungle music scene of the mid 90’s. On rotation was Congo Natty recordings from the Rebel MC, and many classic older pieces featuring vocals and samples from Jamaican music, with stuff from Top Cat, Tenor Fly, Barrington Levy and Supercat (all London based with Jamaican heritage).

There were people there who, you could tell, this kind of music wasn’t usually their thing, but the atmosphere was so good, the weather was so nice, and the music was so infectious that everone got into it. We quickly shot over to Shibuya to the Family Mart, picked up some Yebisu and some Asahi and went back to join in, and danced until they turned off the PA.

 

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Stephen David Smith is a multimedia designer and web designer currently based in tokyo.  When he's not scripting interactive environments in Flash or designing usability for websites, he's down the arcade playing Taiko no Tatsujin or creating animation and music on his laptop. He's influenced by the Japanese aesthetic sensibilities, as well as the 'throw-away' nature of modern Japanese popular culture.
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