A live house (ライブハウス, raibu hausu) is a Japanese live music club – a music venue featuring live music. The term is a Japanese coinage (wasei eigo) and is mainly used in East Asia. It most frequently refers to smaller venues, which may double as bars, especially featuring rock, jazz, blues, and folk music.
History
editLive houses emerged in the early 1970s as part of the booming indie scene. At the beginning, they were similar to rock pubs, where dinner was accompanied by live music. By the end of the decade, chairs were removed and they adopted the format known today.[1] The live house scene got a boost from the phenomena called Tokyo Rockers, a punk rock movement that started in 1978 by the opening of S-Ken studio venue. In the 80s, the Japanese rock scene experienced the so-called band-boom stage, where amateur, indie artists, debuting at small live houses, were picked up by large record labels. The live houses were reduced to a stepping-stone to further one's career and the establishments became part of the music industry cycle, contrary to the original purpose of being unique underground venues for rebellious bands.[1]
One of Tokyo's oldest live houses is Shinjuku-Loft, that opened in 1971 as a jazz café, and Shinjuku-Ruido, that came into existence in 1972.[1] One of the oldest live houses in Kyoto is Coffee House Jittoku[2] (拾得, named after the Chinese monk Shide, "Foundling"),[3] founded in 1973 in an old sake warehouse.[4] In recent years, similar establishments started to appear in big cities in Taiwan, South Korea, China and many of them are also locally called "live houses."[citation needed]
Due to the restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021, the livelihood of many live houses was jeopardized and several had to shut down. Some live houses tried to organize crowd-funding projects to survive.[5][6]
Present day
editToday there are roughly 1,000 live houses in Japan, and around 300 in Tokyo alone.[7] Because live houses are locally based, often the bands performing are from nearby areas with local connections and fanbases. These live houses can use a variety of business models, but among the most popular is that of the quota system, otherwise known as "Noruma". In this system, the live house requires bands performing to sell a predetermined number of tickets to cover costs.[8] If there weren't enough tickets sold, the uncovered costs are put on the performing bands so the house itself doesn't bear any expense. This system often results in small local bands asking their friends and families to buy tickets just to break even on performances. The quota requirement doesn't prevent the Live Houses from being competitive, evident in them often booking bands for a given night by having auditions beforehand.[9] Other business models too exist, such as requiring all viewers to buy a drink upon entry. These models can struggle, because unlike western consumer culture alcohol consumption is not assumed just because one is coming to listen to music.[10]
Attendance in these live houses varies largely by capacity. Some live houses are built to be small and intimate, while others can host thousands of people. In general, attendees come for specific bands they're supporting, not for just the general atmosphere of the establishment. A change in band will often draw a change in crowds. While live houses offer food and drinks, attendees come first and foremost to enjoy the live music. In many cases, audiences won't drink at all to better experience the music.[11]
Because live houses operate locally, the music scenes that develop also develop locally. The culture and circles that form in one metropolitan area can vary from city to city. Thus the scene in Tokyo can often sound very different from the scene that developed and continues to develop in Osaka.
Live houses often function in local capacities, and the musicians they book are most often locally based. These musicians can vary in age and background but frequently share a desire to "to maintain creative control, and a preference to keeping it over signing with labels that would offer them greater opportunity at creativity's expense.".[12] Usually bands perform what has been termed "underground" music (アングラ in Japanese), which simply means music associated with bands without labels or major labels.[13] This can take the shape of heavy rock to emo core, and is often very experimental. In support of this new exploration in music, but opposed to the business model live houses established, some establishments developed what has become known as Onkyo (or Onkyokei)[14] which is just as experimental but in settings that don't demand so much from the audience or performers.
References
edit- ^ a b c Tōru Mitsui, ed. (2014). Made in Japan. Global Popular Music Series. Routledge. pp. 149−151. ISBN 9780415637572.
- ^ "Coffee House Jittoku" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-07-11.
- ^ ライブハウス・クラブ リンク Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine (in Japanese)
- ^ "Jittoku". Time Out Kyoto. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
- ^ "Is This The End Of Japan's Live Houses?". Tokyo Weekender. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
- ^ "新宿ロフト支援プロジェクト『Forever Shinjuku Loft』で販売した、新宿ロフト"オリジナルブレンドコーヒーセット"が再販&店内飲食用販売決定!" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-07-11.
- ^ "Tokyo's live house music scene set to go global". Retrieved 2023-11-17.
- ^ Tōru Mitsui, ed. (2014). Made in Japan. Global Popular Music Series. Routledge. p. 152. ISBN 9780415637572.
- ^ "Article 3: Playing Gigs in Japan". Retrieved 2023-11-17.
- ^ Raymond MacDonald; David J. Hargreaves; Dorothy Miel, eds. (2017). Handbook of Musical Identities. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199679485.
- ^ Jennifer Milioto Matsue (2011). Making Music in Japan's Underground. East Asia: History, Politics, Sociology and Culture Series. Taylor & Francis. p. 100. ISBN 9780415897990.
- ^ Jennifer Milioto Matsue (2011). Making Music in Japan's Underground. East Asia: History, Politics, Sociology and Culture Series. Taylor & Francis. p. 89. ISBN 9780415897990.
- ^ Jennifer Milioto Matsue (2011). Making Music in Japan's Underground. East Asia: History, Politics, Sociology and Culture Series. Taylor & Francis. p. 34. ISBN 9780415897990.
- ^ Lorraine Plourde (2019). Tokyo Listening: Sound and Sense in a Contemporary City. Music / Culture. Wesleyan University Press. p. 15. ISBN 9780819578853.