Probe the Globe

This webpage is dedicated to my travels around the world and thoughts that accompany them. A Disclaimer: I hate the word 'blog'. For the past few years, hearing everyone and their mothers ramble on about 'blog's and 'blogging' and [insert blog-related buzz word here] has made me want to rub my ears on a cheese-grater. But in the end, this is much easier than sending out group emails and pictures, and everyone can check for updates without me having to fill up their inboxes.

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Location: Kinokawa-shi, Wakayama-ken, Japan

If you dont know about me already, none of this should interest you anyways.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

DJ Justice Returns!!


This past Saturday, the Japanese listeners of WKNC 88.1 FM came out in force and were treated to the comeback of their beloved Legend and American Hero. It was the return of DJ Justice in his first public appearance since retiring from the airwaves and The Brad Dixon Radio Program: The Nuisance Party.

In the Japanese music scene, there’s a wonderful underground movement of Rock DJing. Its for those of us who can get into the screaming riffs of Mars Volta and the nerdy sass of Weezer a lot easier than the “what, what, whats” of hip-hop or the “un-tisk-un-tisk-un-tisks” of trance.


The idea of Rock DJing seemed absurd to me when I went to my first event. Flashing lights and cheesy laser effects generally reserved for raves and the like illuminated a kitchen-sized dance floor packed with cheering, lively Japanese people. Some danced while others jumped up and down screaming out the hyms of their favorite records, but everyone was facing the DJ like he was putting on a rock performance of his own. In reality, he needs do little more than flip through his CD collection and fade through tracks, but there’s plenty of energy and fervor to spice things up. The blend of everything from the Crystal Method to Alkaline Trio had me hooked from my first show.


Fast forward a year and a half and I find myself in the DJ line-up for RIZM: Vol. 5, an event combining rock DJs and bands into a stage club event. The idea is non-stopped music. As one band stops, a DJ immediately starts while the bands set-up their equipment and tune, and it continues band/dj/band/dj/etc., ending with the DJs playing until sunrise. I would have never imagined a place in Japan where I could start off a DJ set with At the Drive In (at 3am no less) and have people dance and scream the lyrics back to me with such enthusiasm.

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