Loveland


On Monday, April 30th, I again began my day with a dawn walk up the road from camp.


Clouds were gathering around Aso Mountain for a big rain, but it politely waited until after my walk.


When I came back to camp, I presented Mikiko with two gifts, a silk scarf made from a vintage sari (bought at the Adams Avenue Festival) and a linen purse made by Aya Noguchi.


Then Sachiho and I, with a new friend, a beautiful young koto player named Kanako, driving, left for Kumamoto town to do a workshop and concert in the yoga studio above Shoko Akashi’s elegant natural fiber clothing and metaphysical gift store, Loveland. Here Shoko warmly welcomes us to her store. Shoko owns three stores in Kumamoto; the other two being Earth Collector and Fair Trade Student Cafe Hachidori.


The beautiful exterior of the store, with solar panels on the roof and a totem pole in front.


First Sachiho lead a meditation class.


After a break for tea and snacks, Sachiho did a solo performance, playing her lyre and singing sacred songs.


After Sachiho’s concert, I played some of my songs, and, at the end of my set, we played and sang some songs together.


After our show, we drove to a hotel that housed a hot springs spa to bathe and relax. Before our baths, we had dinner with three members of our audience – a Zen monk and his mother and sister.

Benzaiten


As jet lag would have it, I was wide awake at 4 AM, so I got dressed and went out for a walk. No one else was stirring in camp.


I walked up the road to where I could get a better look at the summit of Aso Mountain. Although it appears to be a volcano, it’s actually part of the wall of an enormous ancient volcanic caldera that includes the mountains on the other side of the valley where Aso town lies.


The mountains that form the other side of the caldera, with Aso City below.


View of camp as I headed back down the hill.


The driveway into the festival.


I shivered in my bed my first night in an unheated room high on a mountain
with no electricity and no running water, and I remembered the old way to heat a bed with stones warmed in a fireplace. So I borrowed some bricks, bought some small towels, and heated the bricks by the campfire the following night, wrapped them in the towels and had a warm bed for the rest of the festival.


The Matsuis, ever the gracious hosts, added their beautiful yutampo, and old-Japanese-style hot water bottle, wrapped in a fabric from India, to my bed warming equipment, to place under the back of my knees. Elevating the knees makes the neck flat, eliminating the need for a pillow.


Mikiko Sato, who will be hosting a concert and workshop in June for me and Sachiho at her place in Sendai, Tohoku prefecture, also lent me her yutampo, which is made of metal, like a canteen, and has a quilted cover. The two hot water bottles also provided me with a supply of warm water with which to wash myself in the morning.


Mikiko (on the left) working in the pre-festival camp kitchen. She teaches classes for parents and children together doing Steiner pre-school activities.


The way I got clean most days of the festival was catch a ride into Aso town with friends and bathe before soaking at a hot springs bath house. On this day, Sachiho and I squeezed into a van with Yu and Saori and four other friends for a whole day of fun that included soaking at an on-sen (hot springs bath house) dedicated to Benzaiten (the Japanese goddess of music and wealth who parallels the Hindu goddess Saraswati), followed by a delicous soup at a noodle house. We would also do a ceremony to Benzaiten at a shrine in her honor at a Shinto temple on the same road as the festival grounds, about a mile down the hill. Eight of us crowded into a van for this outing, and we made music while we traveled.


View of the mountains from Aso town.


Cherry blossoms (sakura) in Aso town.


Sign at the entrance to the hot springs bath house.


The bath house from the street.


The shrine to Benzaiten on the path from the office to the baths. Everyone took a moment to offer a little prayer.


Painting of Benzaiten on the entrance to the women’s section of the hot springs.


Painting of Ebisu, the god of fishing and merchants, on the entrance to the men’s section of the hot springs.


Sachiho soaking in the hot springs.


On our way home, we stopped to offer prayers to the goddess of music for our upcoming performances at the festival. We pass under the torii at the entrance of the Benzaiten shrine on Aso Mountain.


Stairs to the Benzaiten shrine.


The Benzaiten altar.


The famous pair of albino snakes who live at the Benzaiten altar. Yes, those are real snakes, and they are alive.


Sachiho leads prayers at the Benzaiten shrine.


Shrine to the seven fortune gods (of which Benzaiten is one) at the Benzaiten shrine.

Arriving at the Rainbow Festival


When I arrived at Kumamoto Airport in southern Kyushu Island, from Haneda Airport in Tokyo, I knew I would wait for Sachiho and her sons to arrive from Okinawa, but I didn’t know anyone would be waiting for me. When I came out of the baggage claim, there was a long-haired young man in a purple shirt, and I thought, “That must be one of my people.” In fact, it was the bass player in my band for the festival. His name is Daisuke, and he is 22 years old. Beside him stood Auta, the 12-year-old drummer who amazed me at Happy Flower Beach Party Music Festival last October. That made sense. Auta’s father, Rokuro Matsui, is the organizer of the Rainbow Festival.


An hour or so later, Sachiho Kojima, leader for 10 years of the all-woman trance trio, Amana, former punk rock bass player and leader for 17 years of the famous girl band, Zelda, widow of New Wave rock superstar, Donto, spiritual teacher, and mother of Donto’s two young musician sons, Nara (named for the ancient capital of Japan, and pronounced “Nala”) age 12, and Laki (pronounced “Lucky”), soon to be 17-year-old rock lead guitarist/singer/songwriter. Born in New York City while Donto was recording there, he was personally named Lakita by his godfather, his dad’s guru, Bo Diddley.


Daisuke drove us from Kumamoto city to the town of Aso, and up to the mountain meadow where the festival area was under construction. Rokuro Matsui and his wife, Tako, have a business making tipis, and quite a few housed their guests at the festival. Today, four days before the beginning of the festival, they erect the first few.


This gorgeous tipi is where Sachiho and her sons lived during the festival.


I lodged in a portable cabin which doubled as the musical instrument storage for Amana’s instruments and as my shop for selling books, CDs and t-shirts. Those are bamboo tipi poles leaning on the roof. Talk about East meets West.


The first people to turn up at my cabin were improvisational multi-instrumentalist Yu and and his lady, Saori, my friends from Happy Flower Beach Party Music Festival last October in Okinawa, and who have arranged for my concert June 3 at Hobbit Theatre in Tokyo.


They gave me a stack of the flier they’d prepared to publicize the concert, which I offered in my store, along with fliers for Aya Noguchi’s beautiful Living on the Earth clothing line.


A mandala sunset over Rainbow City…


And a gibbous moon over Aso Mountain.

The first Living on the Earth clothing line


It’s really true! Adorable fashion designer Aya Noguchi (on left above) made a line of clothes for Fall 2007 printed with illustrations from Living on the Earth. Her company, Balcony and Bed, boasts two stores in Tokyo, and she wholesales to stores throughout Japan. She came over to Koki and Ayako’s house with her assistant, Chihiro (to her right), bearing clothing samples. I am overwhelmed with joy.


As you can see in the mission statement from her catalog (above), Aya created the line to harken back to the 1960’s and 70’s (was she even born yet then?), so, of course, I feel quite comfortable in her clothes!


I tried on a black background print wool jersey dress over my long sleeved olive green t-shirt (it’s kind of a chilly day). I love it! I think when I wear it for events, I’ll wear a black long sleeved t-shirt under it. All of Aya’s wool jersey items are also available in a brown background print and a light gold background print.


Here’s a closeup of the black background version of the print.


And here’s a closeup of the brown background version of the print.


Here’s an organic cotton knit cowl collar long sleeved t-shirt.


Here’s a loose fitting short dress with elasticized hem in the light gold background version of the print wool jersey.


Here’s how the long dress looks in brown.


Here’s a much more feminine organic cotton Living on the Earth t-shirt. All of Aya’s organic cotton knit items are available in light gray-green, pale salmon pink, or cream.


A big serged square of the printed wool jersey makes a shawl or ample neck scarf (Aya calls them “boas”).


A flowing light gray-green organic cotton knit smock printed on the back with moons and stars. The front closure is asymmetrical.


Aya gave me three of the samples (my choice). I chose a gray-green t-shirt, the black dress I’m wearing in the photo above, and a black print scarf. I’m thrilled I get to wear these during my tour. By the way, the wool jersey does NOT itch. I’ve had the scarf around my neck for four hours at this writing, and, while my skin is often irritated by wool, I am totally comfortable in this.


Throughout my tour I will be distributing Aya’s posters at the tables where I sell my books and CDs, and showing her catalogue to anyone who asks. I will also be importing her clothes next fall to sell from my website and to stores in the USA. So, if you’d like me to advance order any of the clothing for you, please let me know. (To convert the prices into US dollars, go to www.xe.com.) Each piece is available in a choice of three colors, and only one size (“free size”), which should fit women size one through ten. Few Japanese women wear sizes larger than ten, and most wear size six and under, a tribute to their magnificent cuisine and natural moderation.


Early the next morning, Aya and her husband, Kouichi, who is also president of her company, drove me to Haneda Airport on their way to work in Tokyo. She brought me a homemade breakfast – a rice ball wrapped in nori with a bit of baked salmon inside, and a delicious tea made from roasted buckwheat (soba cha!) What sweet people! When I return to Hayama in mid-May, I will visit their home, where I’ll be interviewed by their friend who writes for Switch, an arts and culture magazine. I will wear Aya’s clothing for the photos!

Hiya Hayama!


I spent April 25 and 26 flying from LA to Tokyo, and was kindly met at Narita International Airport by my friend Koki Aso. Between the gasoline and toll roads, the round trip cost him about $70. I pressed newly minted yen from the airport money changer into his hands, but he took little of it. The patience and generosity of this man is monumental. Upon awakening from eight hours of deep slumber on a floor futon in Koki’s home office, I dug the view of the ocean and hills of Hayama (HI-ah-mah) from Koki and Ayako’s second floor balcony. They live in a very Japanese house on a steep hill, only two blocks from the beach. I love it here already.


The Japanese take their cherry blossoms (which they call SAK-ur-ah) very seriously. Even the animation on my rental cell phone screen shows a young couple bicycling through a shower of cherry blossoms, and Ayako thinks that, as the seasons change, the animation will be changed to match.


The cherry tree in front of Koki and Ayako’s house is blooming a little later in the season than most. They are pleased I came in time to see it.


The plums bloom in March, and already there are ume (pronounced OO-may) (plums) that Ayako will use to make umeboshi (salted pickled plums), a fabulous condiment whose vinegar I use to make tofu taste like cottage cheese or yogurt (depending on the texture of the tofu).


I couldn’t wait to take a walk around the neighborhood, and Ayako kindly obliged me with a tour.


At the end of the street where they live, a Shinto shrine (called a JIN-ja) overlooks the ocean.


The red torii (TOHD-ee-ee) (gate) is the dead giveaway it’s a Shinto shrine rather than a Buddhist temple, although some places of worship in Japan combine both religions.


Ayako was as stumped as I was as to why the shrine’s funerary statues wore red bibs.


I picked up where I left off last trip to Japan, photographing their creatively designed manhole covers. Have you ever seen one in the USA with cherry blossoms on it? Hayama’s got ‘em.


Lordy, here’s one with an alien on it!


Looking down from the seafront street, we gaze upon gardens of sea plants swaying in the amazingly clear water (considering that Hayama is one of the closest beaches to the mega-metropolis of Tokyo).


And, across the water, snow-capped Mount Fuji rises above the clouds. I had to disproportionately increase the color depth on this shot to make it more visible, since the air was hazy. But, I mean, isn’t it, like, HUGE?


We walked in Standing Stone Beach Park.


A smiling lady dressed in farming clothes was out gathering shells.


Mount Fuji is vaguely visible from the beach park…


…and beloved Oshima island is barely visible on the horizon as well.


Ayako prepared us a gorgeous, healthful breakfast when we returned to her house: grilled saba fish, freshly picked cherry tomatoes and peapods from their garden, nattoh (sticky fermented soybeans, an excellent fortifier), a richly flavored tea made from roasted black soybeans from Hokkaido, and miso soup with daikon (long white radish) in it. When I eat traditional Japanese food, I feel so good that taking vitamins and other supplements becomes superfluous.

The next morning, Ayako sent me off to Haneda airport with a packed picnic lunch of individually wrapped small treats on a small tray wrapped in an elegantly printed large cloth napkin: pickled cabbage, homemade umeboshi, two cherry tomatoes and three peapods, half a hard boiled egg, two rice balls riddled with sea vegetables, and a small portion of grilled chicken. Ohashi (chopsticks) included!


Mari (on left), Ayako’s friend, came over, and they went out for a while together, leaving me alone to practice vocal technique exercises without disturbing anyone (Koki’s at work today).

Ayako’s husband, Koki Aso, is the journalist who came to Hawaii to interview me for Be Pal outdoor living magazine in May 2005 and determined to help me tour here in 2006. He managed to convince the people at Artist Power Bank, an environmental arts organization in Tokyo, to fund my trip and put on two concerts and a workshop for me.

I then contacted my other friends in the music business in Japan and cobbled together a four-week, eight-concert tour in October 2006, all of which is journaled on this blog. During the October trip, I met the organizers of two music festivals, who each invited me to play at them this May, so this time I bought my own plane ticket and am performing sixteen times in seven weeks, selling the Japanese editions of my books and CDs as I go.

Ocean Beach Idyll


After we left the Adams Avenue Roots Festival, Jodi Shagg showed me the latest incarnation of her wonderful store, In Harmony Herbs and Spices.


She and her partner, herbalist/teacher James Green, remodeled the storefront in quaint, laid back Ocean Beach with elegant wooden moldings and filled it with magical gifts and a goodly supply of herbal remedies and books.


The store’s gorgeous exterior sign, hand-painted for Jodi by her friend, artist David D’Amour.




Jodi and I took a sunset walk along Ocean Beach’s beach and pier.


After our walk, we met James Green and their friend John (owner of Coastal Sage garden store) and his wife Serena (above), and daughters Shenandoah (above), Danielle and baby Nele Belle (above) at El Rancho, Ocean Beach’s Mexican restaurant, for supper. I ordered their signature tamale filled with mole (unsweetened chocolate) sauce and shiitake mushrooms, but they’d sold out of that item for the night.


A good time was had by all, although Danielle (above) had frolicked with such gusto at the Earth Day Festival in Balboa Park (including face painting) that she fell asleep next to John (above) before her dinner came.


I admired the restaurant’s collection of Frida Kahlo reproductions and photos.


This is the view from John and Serena’s house, where I spent the night before.

I was driving back to Los Angeles late that night on Highway 5, when heavy rains whipped my driver side windshield wiper to shreds. I stopped at the first gas station I could find, and, miraculously, there encountered a fellow traveler named George who was recharging his cell phone at the station’s electrical outlet, and who expertly repaired the failing wiper blade. I offered him a CD in appreciation, and he selected Living in Hawaii Style, saying it would brighten his long drive to San Jose that night. Angels are watchin’ over me.

Adams Avenue Roots and Folk Festival


April 22, 2007. I played and sang songs from all three of my CDs at the Adams Avenue Roots and Folk Festival in San Diego, California.


Hmmm, how could I have handled this differently? My niche audience is predominantly cultural creatives, and I was booked into a country western bar in a large tent that was part of the festival. Four country western bands played before me and one after me – for example, in the photo above, High, Wide and Handsome. I didn’t let that stop me from doing what I’d been hired to do, but I thought wistfully about the Earth Day Fair in Balboa Park, which was happening simultaneously, knowing that was where the San Diego contingent of my tribe was listening to music that day. I had spoken there in April 2000, kicking off my eight-month cross-country tour for the 30th anniversary edition of Living on the Earth and my first CD, Music from Living on the Earth.


The people attending the AARFF looked conservative, but the people playing music and running the craft and import booths did not. My (enthusiastic) audience at the Beer Garden consisted of the excellent western swing band that played before before me (above) and the band after me, Mark, the friendly sound guy, my friend Jodi Shagg, who kindly came with me and helped me with my merchandise table, and a couple dozen not-so-country-western types lingering in the bar after the two-steppers stepped out for some fresh air while the hippie girl in purple sang her folk songs.


If I’d been booked on one of the three outdoor stages at the festival, I would have fit in. At one stage, for example, I heard a delta blues guitar player and singer, a Celtic trio, and a Kingston-Trio-style folk ensemble (above). But I didn’t know that ahead of time, and, in any case, I wasn’t the one booking the acts. I got the gig through Sonic Bids, and was grateful.


At one booth I bought a stack of silk scarves made from vintage saris to bring to Japan as gifts. The importer, Roberta, plays bass guitar and exudes Brazilian joie de vivre. The booths burgeoned with tie-dyed clothes, bellydance costumes, embroidered patchwork fashions, handmade pottery and folk art jewelry that dazzled my eyes, but made me wonder whether the vendors were making any sales from the hot dog and beer crowd.


Bluegrass jam session at the booth of Old Time Music.

Alicia Bay Laurel’s Japan Tour Schedule for 2007

ABL onstage at Rainbow Fest.jpg

Onstage May 4, 2007, singing for a thousand people at the Rainbow Festival at Aso Mountain, Kyushu, Japan.  Photo by Tatsuya Nema. It’s a rainy night, and I’m wearing Japanese rice planting rubber boots under the patchwork dress made for me in 1971 by Charlotte Lyons, an artist friend who lived at Wheeler Ranch during the time I created Living on the Earth.

April 30 “Living on the Earth Festival” at the Loveland shop and spiritual center in Kumamoto town on the island of Kyushu, with Sachiho Kojima.

May 4 at the “Rainbow Festival” at Aso Mountain on the island of Kyushu. I’ll be performing a 45-minute set of my songs with a band. The festival is using the Living on the Earth cover goddess as the poster graphic.

May 6 through 10th: Three shows on the island of Kyushu with Sachiho Kojima’s all woman trance trio, Amana, and then two with Sachiho only. On May 6th at the Tomigawa River Festival in the Issahaya district of Nagasaki. On May 7th at the art studio of world reknown granite sculptor Hiroto Sakamoto in the Sazachou district of Nagasaki. On May 8th in the Yobiko area of Saga City. On May 9th at Organ’s Melody night club in Yamaguchi.  On May 10 at Chakra store and tea house in Osaka.

May 19 and 20 “Natural High” Festival at Doshi on Honshu island (about two hours from Tokyo). 45 minute set of my songs (as above) but with a different band! Plus I lead a redux of the decoupage visualization shrine-building from recycled objects workshop I did at the same location last October for Artist Power Bank. And it all gets filmed for the Eco-Words television show, which airs nightly on BS Asahi TV, a station watched by half of the households in Japan.

May 29 and 30, workshop and concert on the island of Oshima, organized by my friend Mana.

June 3, 6 to 8 PM, at Hobbit Theatre, Tokyo, Concert.  Two sets of me and the legendary punk/ska/indie rock singer Yoko Utsumi in a musical dialogue.

June 9 workshop and concert with Sachiho Kojima of Amana in Toyko sponsored by Anima.

June 11 and 12, two workshops and concerts with Sachiho Kojima in Tohoku, which is the moutainous and forested northern-most province of Honshu island, one in the town of Sendai and one in the town of Morioka.

June 17 and 15 “Living on the Earth Festival” at Yukotopia Deadheadsland Nightclub in North Tokyo. This time, TWO 45 minute sets (9 to 11 PM), with Jun and Ken, an excellent bass player and lead guitarist I met last October when I played there last.

Yukotopia poster2.jpg

My Concert at the Paisley Violin


On Saturday, January 27th, 2007. I played two hours of my music at the Paisley Violin, a supremely hip small eatery on Grand Avenue in the downtown arts district of Phoenix, functioning as a second living room for the boho denizens of the neighborhood. Musician Chris Warmuth, who lent me a PA system which he gallantly carried from house to car to club to car to house for me, ran into half a dozen friends while we were there. My new friend Sarah Curtis came to this show, too, to sell stuff from my table while I was playing.


This being a CD release party for my most recent recording, I played and sang ten jazz, blues and gospel songs and two jazz standards from What Living’s All About, accompanied by a version of the final mix from the CD that excluded my recorded vocal and guitar parts.

Well, all but one song. Nature Boy was recorded rubato (outside of a time signature), improvised in the studio by me, upright bassist John B. Williams, and percussionist Enzo Tedesco, all of us playing at the same time. In order to perform the song with the recording minus my voice, I would have had to memorize the entire improvisation and duplicate exactly what I sang on the recording. That kind of misses the whole point of doing an improvisation, which is to spontaneously create music together that has never existed before. So, Nature Boy was relegated to being played (as a finished recording) during one of my breaks.


I played on an elevated stage surrounded by wonderful nature photographs by Greg Lansing, whose show lasted the month of January. After my second set, Chris, Sarah and I had a delicious meal at the bar.


I brought a full panoply of my wares, and Gina, the manager at the Paisley Violin, offered to keep the table set up and sell the goods on it during the week to help publicize my second show at the Paisley, next Friday, February 2nd, from 7 to 8 PM on the evening of the First Friday monthly open gallery art walk.

Panel Discussion on Northern California Communes at the CSA Conference


Arthur Kopecky and Alicia Bay Laurel at the panel discussion at the CSA conference.

Listen to the panel discussion.

Alicia Bay Laurel, Ramon Sender, Delia Moon and Arthur Kopecky, four authors who each lived in more than one commune during the late ‘sixties and early ‘seventies in northern California, discuss the significance of those communities at the 30th annual conference of the Communal Studies Association, an international group of scholars who present papers on communal societies of many eras and locales.


Ramon Sender, Delia Moon, Arthur Kopecky at the panel discussion.

The panel is chaired by Timothy Miller, a much-published author on communal societies, professor at University of Kansas, and founder of the Communal Studies Association. The panel discussion took place on September 30, 2006 at the Marconi Conference Center in Marin county, California, a site which was once a commune run by Synanon.