Hi, folks. Welcome to my new website coming to you from Yokohama, Japan, where I plan to live for the rest of my life. Yokohama is a great place for walking. That’s my exercise. Walking to Sakuragicho or Yokohama Station. I love Japan–the people, the food, the clean subways and streets. I live in a very quiet neighborhood, which is wonderful for a musician. Just about every house has flowers outside. I see lots of happy children everywhere. In New York, where I come from, children are hidden away or strapped in strollers. (See Don’t Strap Me Down.) My wife and I are working on slide shows for people of all ages. I’m writing and performing the soundtracks and illustrating. We also build miniature structures, take photos and write stories. I’m very excited about what we are doing.
I didn’t miss the earthquake in March. We experienced a small one on March 9th and decided jokingly that the next time we would meet under the dining table. Two days later, we were under the table. The apartment shook violently and the paintings on the wall danced. Our TV crashed to the floor, but thanks to Japanese technology it didn’t break. So we saw everything that followed live. Then I realized that those (Sendai, Iwaki, Iwate and Aomori) were places where I had played on tour. Anyone who might have met me or heard me play, please contact me at this website and let me know how you are doing.
After the earthquake, I started to get e-mails from the U.S. urging me to come back and save myself. I wrote that they had enough atomic plants of their own to worry about and sent photos of the beautiful cherry blossoms near my house.
A week later, my mother-in-law, my wife and I went to Hiroshima–the first city that experienced the nuclear insanity. I had played there before but never saw the outside of the club, which was in a hotel. This time, my family took me to the Peace Memorial Museum. There was a replica of the city and my mother-in-law pointed out where her home had been bombed.
My Japanese cousin drove us to Onomichi, a beautiful place with a fabulous view of the Inland Sea. I found a cute little store and bought some excellent Japanese bamboo pens. I draw with bamboo pens. Shaving the points gives me my own line. In New York, the pens I bought came from Southeast Asia, but here, quality pens made in Japan are available. In this digital age, I think that it’s important to seek out organic methods of making art and music.