January 1st

Well, it’s 5:22 AM, on the first day of the new year. How did you all spend your New Year’s Eve? I made okonomiyaki, and year’s-end-soba, and watched GACKT’s The Sixth Day & Seventh Night live tour 2004. Now I’m just waiting for the first rays of sun to touch the snowy horizon…

Kyoto at dawn

I wanted to share this video as “the first thing I wanted to see on the first day of the new year”, because, for one, it has two of the most incredible artists featured in it, collaborating together, and two, it’s such a wonderful performance of a beautiful song. What could possibly be a more perfect way to start your year than with this?

+ 粉雪[Konayuki] , by Remioromen (from the single Konayuki, and the album Horizon -out of print-)….as performed on Dec. 18th, 2009, by GACKT and Nishikawa Takanori (T.M. Revolution/abingdon boys school).+

“Arigatou, ne”

Well, it’s New Year’s Eve. I don’t know what you lot are doing, but thisVisualist is sitting up to wait for dawn and my New Year’s wish!

The New Year is always a bit of a mixed time. On one hand, there is a depth of reflection and thinking back on the year we are now leaving behind. Hopefully you’re looking back and taking stock of your successes, achievements, and gained experiences. If there is anything you’re regretting, hopefully there’s a chance of making up for it, or achieving it, in the next year. On the other hand, there is a chance to look forward with positive expectation for everything that is to come in the new year. For example, a.b.s.’ Abingdon Road album. I hope your piggy-banks got fat this holiday season!

I, at least, feel like 2009 has been a fantastic year.

In April I spent one month in Kyoto, Japan, where I spent many hours at karaoke joints with some wonderful people; scoured used (and new) CD shops for just about anything and everything I could get my hands on (and stood for the first time in a real-live VISUAL KEI section); and brought back 60 CDs, including brand-new GACKT singles, and a stack of Visual Kei and Jrock magazines.

In November, I went to the UK to see one of my favorite bands, abingdon boys school, perform live. This was a monumental, life-changing experience worth all of the hard-work and effort I put in to achieving it. The live was unbelievable, as well as being my first ever Jrock concert. (And my first visit to London.)

Tower Bridge, London, UK

I was also able to complete some long-standing writing projects….One of the most fun out of these, however, which will probably never be “completed”, is the work I have put into SECRET GARDEN. I feel like I was really able to dive much deeper into Jrock and Visual Kei, and that has been a priceless experience.

On that note, I wanted to take a moment to say that it has almost been a year since I moved Secret Garden to WordPress. I would like to sincerely thank everyone who reads Secret Garden; everyone who left comments, emailed me, linked me, or shared and spread the word about this blog in any way! I am looking forward to another fun year full of Jrock, and I am very much looking forward to connecting with more of you in 2010. Arigatou ne…

I would also like to extend a Special Thanks to a few particular people:

Otousan, Roukku-Star, 日本におねいさんへどうもありがとう、スターさんへガクトのものをどうもありがとうございます、ブレイスレットさんやおじさんの社べたことありがとうございました;and everyone whose media appears on SG!

明けましておめでとうございます!Photo credit:

Japanese lanterns – Shutterstock

Fushimi-Inari shrine, Fushimi-ku, Kyoto –  Gacktpause

Tower Bridge, London, UK – Gacktpause

Fireworks- mypetjawa

Year of the Tiger

Detail of a Tiger from a wall-scroll dated 1755, Itou Jakuchuu

By reckoning of the Chinese lunar calendar, 2010 will be the Year of the Tiger. That means that anyone born in 1986, 1974, 1962, 1950, 1938, 1926, 1914, 1902, 1890 etc, will have a year full of extra-special good luck, prosperity, and good-fortune (well, I’m not sure even the Chinese calendar can speak for those born in 1890. Sorry.). If you’ve been putting anything off the past twelve years, I recommend you Tigers get off your haunches and put it into action– because you won’t get astrological backing like this until 2022. That’s very far away, just so you know.

The Chinese (and Japanese) lunar calendar functions in cycles of 12 years. Each year is represented by a zodiac animal (called the “Juunishi”, in Japanese), which in turn, has its own unique characteristics and traits which are said to carry over into people of that sign. However, unlike our western zodiac, where your sign is determined by the month/day of your birth, your Chinese/Japanese zodiac sign is determined by the year of birth.

Chinese Zodiac diagram

(Note: For those born in January, when determining your Zodiac sign, be warned that your sign will depend on which month the Chinese New Year happened in the year you were born. For example, in 1991 the New Year happened in February, therefor anyone born in January of 1991 is actually the horse sign, and not the sheep (which is credited as year 1991. Never trust Chinese restaurant placemats.)

Unlike the Chinese New Year, which moves around a lot, the Japanese New Year takes place always on January 1st. Easy for you lot to keep track of. In Japanese, it is called “Oshougatsu“, and the appropriate greeting is “akemashite omedetou gozaimasu“.

Traditional Japanese celebrations begin typically the day before, or several days before, January 1st. Usually the entire house is cleaned thoroughly– futons are aired, tatami mats are repaired/changed/dusted, shouji (sliding doors) are cleaned and fixed/ paper gets changed, walls and floors get scrubbed, etc. The purpose of this extensive (and exhausting) cleaning is to clear out all the old energy and filth of the passing year, to make room for good, brilliant, fresh energy in the new year.

Traditionally, family would gather together and make old-fashioned home-made mochi

Making mochi

(pounded rice-cakes), which can turn out so fatally chewy that the Japanese invented a special vacuum-tool specifically for the use of sucking stuck pieces of gluey mochi from aging relative’s gullets. Nowadays because the process of pounding the rice to prepare mochi is so strenuous and time-consuming, most families purchase their mochi (although apparently it’s much more glutenous than home-made mochi, and thus many times more fatal to Grandma).

Another tradition is sending oshougatsu cards. No, Japanese post-men do not have New Year’s day off. In fact, vast amounts of mail is delivered on January 1st. People write cards (usually with an image of the year’s zodiac on it and a set phrase) and send them up to a month before hand. They stamp the envelope with a stamp that basically says to hold the mail, and the post-office sets the mail aside for each family, so that these cards do not arrive a day before, nor a day after, January 1st.

On New Year’s Eve, some families prepare special new year’s bentou (lunch boxes), and almost everyone eats fresh soba noodles (buckwheat noodles)  and mandarin oranges. The last two are very traditional oshougatsu foods. Then everyone sits around, legs tucked under the kotatsu table, to watch the first sunrise of the year. Around 10:30 PM, the shinto-Buddhist temples will begin ringing their bells–a total of 108 times (to cleanse the spirit of the 108 sins). The bells are rung slowly, and usually take about an hour. Then everyone eats end-of-year soba noodles in broth, and as one is eating it, one is meant to spend some time considering how delicious and wonderful the food is, and how healthy it is, and how healthy we are eating such a wonderful meal. Soba is eaten as the last thing one has in the old year. It serves the purpose of, more or less, setting the pace for the coming year: healthiness, strength, prosperity, and beauty.  Therefor, it is important to spend some time contemplating that, and focusing attention and energy into how you would like to have the new year develop.

Then we will all make our New Year’s wishes!

Note:  It is customary to refuse any kind of alcoholic beverage on new Year’s Eve (quite unlike the barbaric West) , because it sets a bad precedence for the entire year if you’re slammed instead of approaching the coming year with a clear, perceptive, appreciative mind. So save the sake for New Year’s day!

a Chinese-style Tiger

If you want to learn more about the Chinese zodiac, read the shoujou manga Fruits Basket. The story is about an orphaned teenage girl who is taken in by a mysterious and beautiful family of young men– each one carrying the curse of the Juunishi (zodiac). Shoujo, yes, but friendly to the sensitive boy– FB is a sweet read.

Also check out www.chinesezodiac.com to determine your zodiac sign and learn more.

Not long now until New Year’s, so I hope that this post helped you decide your plans! I will be preparing okonomiyaki and watching GACKT live DVDs until dawn.

Gacktpause+