http://www.gethiroshima.com/en/gethiroshima/Hype/2004/08/25/frf04_review
Slide Show

I still thinks it's a load of shit. Rock'n'roll just shouldn't be so fucking expensive.
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
AssKissinger wrote:Some more reviews of Fuji Rock
http://www.gethiroshima.com/en/gethiroshima/Hype/2004/08/25/frf04_review
Slide Showhttp://www.gethiroshima.com/Hype/2004/08/25/frf04_review/4/
I still thinks it's a load of shit. Rock'n'roll just shouldn't be so fucking expensive.
sumyunguy wrote:you all should check out Bonnaroo, it just happened in Tennessee for the third year. Now there's a festival for you.
BBC wrote:
Clean toilets, polite fans and even hot showers - can this really be a music festival?
Japan's version of Glastonbury - the Fuji Rock Festival - finished on Sunday night at Naeba, about 75 minutes from Tokyo by bullet train.
But for people familiar with the UK's music festivals, it was a completely different experience.
As you would expect, a long list of international artists performed, ranging from The Cure to The Chemical Brothers.
But while Fuji Rock is unashamedly based on Glastonbury, it has taken on a decidedly Japanese flavour.
For example, how many UK festival-goers would happily leave their valuables lying on picnic rugs while they popped off to buy lunch?
And where else would queues for recycling bins be longer than those for beer?
Smokers even diligently pop their butts into portable ashtrays.
The queue for official merchandise was endless, day and night
This Japanese fixation on tidiness and recycling creates a pleasant and enjoyable space for watching music - enhancing a site which is already breathtaking.
The various stages are dotted along the Naeba valley (a ski resort in the winter) and everything is interconnected by winding paths, picturesque boardwalks and meandering streams.
Stages are dwarfed by a green wall of mountains and one performance space is reached only by a 5.4km cable car ride.
Japanese music fans move between stages and watch performances in a polite and friendly manner, perhaps perplexed by the small pockets of westerners more willing to express their emotions.
. . . It seems they will queue for hours in searing heat to buy the latest band T-shirts, with queues for other commodities (such as beer) being non-existent.
. . . Campers overlooked the site, pitching their tents on a golf course
Fittingly for a country obsessed with golf, the campsite sits on a mountainside golf course.
Campers stake claims to the flattest piece of fairway or pitch tents in sandy bunkers, with the only prohibited areas being the roped-off putting greens.
Queues for toilets and the limited showers are inevitably long at peak times, though toilet hygiene levels are usually better than anything you will see in the UK.
'Paradise' And for those willing to wait a bit longer, there is even a hot spa loaded with posh soap and shampoos.
. . . And British artist Jarvis Cocker enthusiastically told revellers how lucky they were to have so much sunshine.
After describing the misery of muddy British festivals, he pointed to the blue sky and dramatic green mountain backdrop, telling the fans: "This is paradise." . . . more
DrP wrote:By the way here's a facitious quiz for anyone - Can you name ANY Japanese Band that has made the Billboard (non-Japan) Hot 100?
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest