5/30/2011

Juilliard Concert Schedule

Friday, May 27
6 pm Toho Gakuen School of Music
Sunday, May 29
3 pm Worship Grace City Church
5 pm Grace City Church Tokyo
Monday, May 30 - Relief Work
6 pm Watanoha Elementary School Shelter
Tuesday, May 31 - Relief Work
1 pm Koganehama Community Center Grand Opening
6 pm Onagawa First Hoikuen Shelter
Wednesday, June 1 - Relief Work
3 pm Onagawa First Elementary School
Thursday, June 2 - Relief Work
11 am Hiyoriyama Park, Ishinomaki
5:30 pm Onagawa no Umi Senkaku
Friday, June 3
6 pm Sangenjaya Hall, Tokyo
Saturday, June 4
7 pm Lowther Residence, Tokyo
Sunday, June 5
10 am Worship Immanuel Fukagawa Church
3 pm Worship Grace City Church Tokyo
6:30 pm Musician's Concert Party, Tokyo

5/20/2011

Juilliard group arrives soon!

Next Thursday ten students from The Juilliard School of Music are being sent from Redeemer Presbyterian Church through Mission to the World. Besides many activities in Tokyo, we will spend five days up north in tsunami hit areas.

5/14/2011

Healing through musical relief

Music has such power to open people's hearts to share their stories, their lives, and their tears! Stories from each event last week:

Monday, May 9 - Watanoha Elementary School Shelter, Watanoha, 6 pm

Mr. Takahashi, now 84 years old, sang Japanese songs in the traditional style when he was younger. No one in the shelter had an idea he could sing until shakuhachi Bruce arrived! So many special connections with people through this event...


Tuesday, May 10 - Hiyoriyama Park, Torii Gate, Ishinomaki, 2 pm

"Can you play the Tennessee Waltz? It was my mother's favorite song." Her mother was washed away in the tsunami along with 11,000 other people in the town of Ishinomaki. So much grief and so much loss! We performed on top of a hill in front of a shrine overlooking the whole city. Throngs of people come to write their prayers and tie flowers to the fence. It was hard to concentrate as I stared out over the destruction while playing. This video is from an organ improvisation with saxophone and shakuhachi.


Tuesday, May 10 - Minato Elementary School Shelter, Ishinomaki, 5 pm

"Wait! I'll be right back!" An older gentleman ran off to his temporary home in a third grade classroom to find something. It was a shakuhachi he had made by hand but was then buried under mud in the tsunami. Bruce played it in the concert, greatly filling the man with joy and leading him to give it to Bruce as a gift.

Wednesday, May 11 - Onagawa Nuclear Power Plant, Shelter, Onagawa, 3 pm

Two month anniversary of the earthquake and tsunami. At 2:46 pm a moment of silence was held to remember the victims, and then we started a concert for people sheltered in the gymnasium of the nuclear power plant near Onagawa.

Security was incredibly intense. Two days in advance, we had to give the names (and correct spelling!) of everyone who would be entering the plant along with license plate numbers for all vehicles. It took an hour to enter and an hour to leave the plant as each vehicle was checked three times and paperwork was examined thoroughly.

The atmosphere in the shelter seemed dark and depressed. Bruce called out a melody of healing on his shakuhachi from one side of the room, and Steve answered back from his saxophone on the other side of the room. Improvisatory calls and response of hope and healing mesmerized everyone in the room.

A junior high school girl was moved to pull out her flute and play for us as we left. Bruce and Steve quickly grabbed their instruments, and some women began to dance. I couldn't believe the change in mood from when we first arrived!


Thursday, May 12 - Onagawa Fitness Complex, Onagawa, 10:40 am

"After the earthquake, my husband told me to grab the kids, get in the car, and drive to high ground. He said he'd be right behind me in his truck right after he closed up the house. We never saw him again..."

So much grief and despair in Onagawa, where the wave went over 5 story buildings! By the end of the concert, over half the audience was in tears. It was the most emotional concert I've ever been involved in. One man was doubled over in grief on the floor. One woman who asked for my signature had lost both her husband and her father in the tsunami. There are no words...

5/08/2011

Karuizawa Charity Concert

On Saturday, May 7 Trio Ray (Abi, Yoshimi, and me) gave two charity concerts at the coffee shop of Megumi Chalet in Karuizawa, a town in the mountains about a 3 hour drive from Tokyo. Over $500 was raised for relief work in northern Japan! During the whole concert, we showed pictures from travels up north and told stories about the needs there.

After the concert, one 80-year-old gentleman played a song for me that he wrote for the survivors of the tsunami. His wife then joined in and sang. It was so touching! I wish I had it on video to show you...

Grace City Gospel Choir

The trip I planned (but wasn't able to go because Abi was in the hospital) for the Grace City gospel choir to head up to Ishinomaki April 29-30 was successful! They shared music with refugees at Watanoha Elementary School shelter (above) and outside Ishinomaki Christ Church (below), which serves as a distribution center for people in the neighborhood. During the tsunami, this church was almost completely submerged under water. After the work of many volunteers, the grounds were cleared and the mud was washed away to make the building usable for worship and for the surrounding community.

5/02/2011

The Aroma of Beauty

We stepped out into the debris cleared space to set up a market and start making tonjiru (pork miso soup). The area surrounding us was overwhelming in its devastation and stench of decaying fish and squid washed in by the tsunami.

Then something magical happened! The pleasant aromas of the cooking soup began to waft through the air, a smell almost forgotten in the memories of the survivors who began to line up. They had not been able to cook for over a month. It awakened a hunger for life, an appetite for something that really existed, a soup that could satisfy that hunger...for a little while.

In the picture above, you can see Bruce Huebner (graduate of the top music school in Japan) playing his shakuhachi bamboo flute while people wait in line for the soup. His tunes wafted gently through the air telling stories of pain and of peace. It awakened in us a joy in life that had been forgotten. It was not a way to distract people from the boredom of waiting in line. It was not mere entertainment. It was the delicious odor of a soup of a different kind, but one nonetheless just as real and meaningful, perhaps more so! It pointed to a source of beauty that will always satisfy and never fade away. Our spirits heard it and remembered...