Wednesday, June 04, 2025

Once 'Round Osaka

 

 

What follows is the fuller "director's cut" of my recent piece in The Japan Times.  

 

The arrival of pleasant springtime weather, along with press coverage of the Osaka Expo 2025 reminded me of a walk I'd long wanted to undertake, following the JR's Osaka Loop Line (Kanjō-sen).  The idea initially came from a blog, though the writer didn't finish (and did, surprisingly, the worst parts).   I found a couple of others who too had done only part of the walk. The maps showed the route to be a total of 21.7 kilometers, which was manageable, but if the feet or mind grew weary, I could always hop a train and finish another day.  The only real rule I'd keep was to pass before each of the line's 19 stations, close enough to hear the distinct departure melodies of each.  

The Kanjo-sen didn't start out as a loop. The initial section was born in 1898 as the Joto line, connecting Osaka station with Tennoji, routed through eastern Osaka so as not to impede the large number of ships that passed through the rivers of the western city.  A large section of the rails and bridges were destroyed during an air raid on the final full day of World War II, and the rebuilt loop was finally closed in 1961.   
Today, an average of 12 trains per hour run the entire line, with trains leaving Osaka and Tennoji every five minutes, at a maximum speed of 100 kph.  Close to 270,000 passengers per day ride the striped carriages, a toned down version of the completely orange carriages of the 1990s, a color befitting the Halloween parties held onboard by expats during that decade.   

Standing within Osaka Station, the first question is which direction to go, inner or outer loop, clockwise or counter clockwise. As Buddhism is a profound influence, clockwise seems the obvious choice.  But something is inexplicably pulling me counterclockwise, so westward I go.  

Outside the station, a quartet of college students direct visitors to the line running out to the Expo site.  Beyond them, the broad boulevards are eerily empty, a mere 15 minutes after the morning commute. This was all familiar ground to me back in the ‘90s, in those pre-internet days where before a bus return to the ‘Nog, I’d grab some CDs from Tower Records, a pile of books at Kinokuniya, and fill up on Mexican at Chico and Charlie’s.  I’ve always felt that Umeda is the part of Osaka that looks most like Tokyo, with its tidy steel and glass towers.  But the sight of the highway offramp passing through the Gate Tower Building reminds one of Osaka’s earthy pragmatism.


Not far off, I spy a humanoid robot sitting without irony in the lobby of HAL, the city’s fashion college.  Beyond, more wrought iron climbing the side of the always eye-catching Monterrey Hotel.  I always puzzle at the expansive empty space out front, at this hole in the middle of prime real estate, in one of the biggest cities in the world.  I’d been its center once, to attend the Kinoshita Circus about a decade ago.  


It was only a single station away where the glass high rises disappeared, and the neighborhoods began to appear.  Fukushima helped set what soon would be a familiar pattern:  narrow lanes running toward and along the station were a bevy of restaurants, bars, and shops, many built into the base of the elevated line itself.  Befitting the cliche that Japan’s metro stations are veritable villages of their own.


City walking has its own hazards.  Emerging from a pedestrian underpass, I begin to follow the wrong rail line, the Hanshin, westward toward Kobe.  Other patterns appear.  Between the stations is a forest of modest apartments buildings, I know that a block or two behind, modest houses will appear.  What temples there are are of ferroconcrete, sitting on plots denuded by wartime bombings, or reduced by American Occupation policy.  But the boulevards are still empty.  

As the line heads further west, I find myself in an industrial landscape straight from 1980’s dystopian sci-fi, or the minds of 1980’s city planners. Overall, Osaka lacks Tokyo’s green spaces.  Color tend to be more prominent around construction sites, the bright synthetic materials around cables, orange cones, colorful barriers.  Like a venomous animal warning, come no closer.    There was even greater color in the graffiti that covers a large number of walls and surfaces.  Befitting Japanese aesthetic, it serves more as art than as vandalism. What I don’t see is the roof art painted atop many of the private homes along the line, with cryptic messages for commuters. Only two remain from the original seven, and you’d need to be on the actual trains themselves to see those.  


Besides the ironic Hanshin line adverts on the front of JR Nishikujo station, the only real highlight at street level is Toda’s Osaka City Central Wholesale Market, the second largest wholesale market in Japan after Tokyo’s Toyosu.  The markets were served by the city’s many rivers, befitting the “Venice of Japan,” but a bane to the long distance walker.  A long pedestrian tunnel drops four stories to pass beneath the Aji riverbed, before opening to Bentenchō, gateway to Osaka Bay, with its new station built for the for Expo, and a vintage collection of bars and coffee joints straight out of 1950s film noir.  No doubt reeking of eight decades of cigarettes.  A delivery truck is parked tight against a wall, to hide its driver in the act of urination.  

The biggest attraction along this stretch is the Osaka Dome, with its hat befitting a Turkish emir.  Now owned by Kyocera, a name popping up more and more as if an attempt to be the Mori of Kansai.  I’d rather see a game at Koshien any day.    


The patterns further develop.  Nearer the stations, the outer ring had the little alleys and arcades.  Between them, the inner ring had more highlights.  Osaka Taisho was a little slice of Okinawa, for the restaurants, rather than the weather. Its station front looked nearly as dated as its eponymous era, but more charitably had the look of the Showa, a neighborhood right out of Ozu films,  the signages of bars climbing up the sides of the buildings.  Ashiharabashi has the Liberty Osaka human rights museum, dedicated mainly to Japan’s outcaste, whose traditional work tanning hides reflects the numerous Taiko shops along the route.  The area was also famed for its firefighters, being the origin point of the worst fire in Osaka’s history.


The sense of economic hardship continues through Imamiya, long a center of day-laborers, many brought to the area to rebuild Kobe after that city’s 1995 earthquake.  While the number of laborers have declined due to age, the area has more recently become the base for bargain hunting tourists and backpackers, due to the low accommodation costs and easy access to better known sites.  There is a well-lit cluster of stand-up food stalls before Shin-Imamiya Station, and I’m tempted, having walked for over three hours without a stop.  But I carry on, getting a glimpse of Tsutenkaku, and with Tennoji just ahead, more and more foreign tourists begin to appear. 


Tennoji is the gateway to the south. The station is underground here, the line not going down so much as the terrain rises up. The sheer number of attractions and restaurants and the accompanying crowds is almost overwhelming, especially bustling at lunch time. I did beeline excitedly toward some kind of beer event in Tenshiba park, only to find it won’t open until 3 pm.  From Heaven to Hell in mere seconds. As this is one of the city’s most popular tourist spots, I choose not to linger, following the curve of the line as it turns north. 


Maybe it is due to growing hunger, but there is a sort of food continuity along the Loop Lines eastern edges. Scents follow; fresh bread, malodorous pork oil for ramen. Due to the tremendous amount of eateries, this stretch was befitting a food tour or culinary walk.  A generous proportion serve grilled meat, or okonomiyaki.  The restaurants built beneath the line itself are cleaner, more modern, modern, more spacious.  


Existing as usual in opposition to Tokyo, the city’s High and Low cities have been seemingly flipped, with the east here having more wealth and status.  Things grow more colorful due to the numerous house-front gardens, especially this time of year.  This part of the city is shabby chic, the slightly unkept look has a certain charm, more suburban than urban. 


Tsuruhashi Station is dominated by Korea Town and its many yakiniku and Korean restaurants. The bustling atmosphere around the station has been selected as one of the 100 Best Scented Landscapes by the Ministry of the Environment. Back when I used to teacg my weekly yoga class, I used to love lunching on chimiji down these narrow lanes, playfully teased by the aunties within.  It made me love Osaka and the humanity of its residents.  This is the one city in Japan where people are apt to make eye contact.  Nearby is Goryeo Market, selling food and items from the Korean Peninsula.   The Tamatsukuri arcade further on has an unusual number of private residences mixed amongst the old-timey shops and small eateries. 


Approaching the Osaka Castle grounds, I spy the only house of the day still made of wood.  I cut off-trail through the expansive grounds of Ōsakajōkōen, happy to have some soft soil beneath my feet.  A replica of the Edo period Kyōbashi bridge leads me directly into that eponymous station.  During that time, the area was quite bustling as a staging area for those about to under take the long walk to the Tokugawa capital.  The current entertainment district dates from that time. Kyōbashi bore the brunt of the Allied bombing on the last day of the war, with one bomb dropping directly onto the station itself, an act that some considered a war crime.  A memorial to the close to 1000 victims can be found near the station’s south exit.


The neighborhood north of the station takes on the wealthiest look I’ve yet seen.  Kindergartners in fancy private school uniforms walk beneath the weight of enormous randoseru bags.   I pass Sakuranomiya Station, a famous cherry blossom viewing spot, and one of the oldest stations on the line. Remains of the original line are just north of the current station, though these are gradually being lost to development.  After the Loop Line crosses the old Yodogawa River,  I play peek-a-boo with the line down the side alleys, spotting a lone brick arch along the way.    


I cross the 2.6 kilometer long Tenjinbashisuji Shopping Arcade, a walk in its own right to poke around some of its 800 shops, many with a long history.  Ogimachi park leads to neighborhood that bend and twist on the final approach to Umeda.  I spy my first Jizo of the day, whose numbers increase, along with that of street smokers.   


The towering ferris wheel welcomes me to Umeda.  I am further welcomed by the wrought irons gates of Hankyu Dept, like stepping into the Galleria in Milan.  As I make my final steps, I spy a Loop scooter, which seems to be mocking me.  Admittedly, that would have been a far better way to have done this route.  (But at least there aren't any fucking Mario carts.)  


If were ever to do this walk again, I’d only do half, clockwise from Umeda to Tennoji, bookended by meals.  Does that make it half a walk?  Or in the spirit of Buddhist clockwise perambulation, the Middle Way?



On the turntable:  Thievery Corporation, "The Mirror Conspiracy"

 

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Don't You Know We're Riding

 

 

...Marrakesh and Jemaa el-Fnaa:  cobras, monkeys, drums, fruit stands with plastic food, minaret scaffolding with three gargoyles, Tibetan-looking water-bearer, motorbikes roaring through the souk, timeless carts being pushed uphill (I help one old guy, joking I'm on a working holiday visa).  Madrasa packed with tourists, later we queue at the tombs of people we've never heard of.  Breaking away from the group to go to a rooftop cafe above the Kasbah for a quiet lunch. Starting an international incident as two hat vendors vie for our business, then escalates into heated argument.  Young woman in colorful clothes turns out to be western fashion rather than a native dress.  Bad music from a hotel nearby somewhere.  Dinner at Dar Es Salaam with the trad music and belly dancers and photographic traces of Hitchcock...

...  Marrakesh express to Casablanca.  Parched earth of the Sahara, sharing the red red of New Mexico, ofttimes cultivated.  Near in the sea, as seagulls hover over a rubbish tip.  Casablanca reminds of a British built city of the Raj, with its large municipal edifices.  The only thing real about Rick's Cafe are the two enormous bouncers preventing entry.  Even more enormous is the city mosque, miles and miles of carpet.  Boys jump into the sea from an adjacent wall, until chased away by cops, return after the cops move on...  

 

 

...Wending the narrow lanes of Rabat, seeking traces of blue...  

...Train to Fez through patchwork of hills.  Ditching the group again to do a deeper look at Fez's souk, the tourists gone in the heat of afternoon.  Getting truly lost in there, until coming across the Rue Talaa Kebira, which we follow past the poetically crumbling Bou Inania Madrasa, and on until Bab Boujloud and our exit...

...Through the Middle Atlas. A ski field called Michelin above the Euro-looking Ifrane.  A long ride as the mountains become hills, become desert.  Oases always seem to be on the right side of the road, so you get two different trips based on what side of the bus you sit on. 
Desert hills, a row of giants with furrowed brows.    Palm tree groves, which imply the presence of water, yet their branches are covered with dust from trunk to tip. High broad streets like in a Texas town. These settlements of faded glory, some buildings empty, some intact, others appearing to be going up. I think of India and its unfinished look, until it hits me that maybe these kinds of places have always looked like this, some buildings empty, some intact, others appearing to be going up...

 

 

...Charming if not slightly tacky Hollywood oasis hotel at Erfoud.  Market day in Rissani, lingering over coffee and watching the world come to us.  Leaving the road to blast through the dunes in a 4x4 to our camp digs.  Not tents but small concrete bungalows with showers and A/C.  Obligatory camel ride out to the Erg Chebbi dunes for sunset. Our guide shushing everyone to enjoy the quiet, followed by her own phone chat to a grandchild somewhere in the green of England.  Music around the fire after dark.  Me rising early, stalking the sunrise alone. Nothing beyond here but Timbuktu.  Our vehicles passing line after line of camel trains as we make our way back to tarmac, and town...  

 

 

 ...Two days drive through the desert.  Pock-marked ghost qanats stretching out to their former sources in the far off hills. Despite the lack of water, there seem to be a lot of car washes in the desert.  Casbah after casbah.  Driving through the canyons, walking up to a ruined hotel in Todra Gorge.  Incredible oasis of Tinghir (but why won't the bus stop to let us go down and walk in the shade of their palms?) Ouarzazate and Ait Ben Haddou, films sets, real and imagined.  Over the Tizi n'Tichka and back to Marrakesh...

...Sharing with LYL that we wish we had a few more days here.  And shame on me for not realizing that Essaouira was less than two hours away.  Next time...

 

On the turntable:  Tommy Bolin, "Energy"

 

Saturday, May 17, 2025

Once 'Round Osaka

 

 

My latest at The Japan Times...

 

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2025/05/17/travel/osaka-loop-line-walk-27-kilometers/

 

On the turntable:  Tears for Fears, Secret World"

 

Friday, May 09, 2025

This Blog at 20

 


Two thousand, three hundred, fourteen posts, and counting...

 

On the turntable: David Gray, "White Ladder 20th Anniversary Edition"

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

One More than Zero

 

 

 On the train, reading Slaves of New York for the first time in close to 40 years.   And I immediately think of you, and how as budding creative writing majors we used to rib this book, as well as Less than Zero and Bright Lights Big City, and all those other books by young authors belonging to that genre dubbed, "...and then they fucked," generally brought out on Gary Fisketjon's Vintage Contemporaries series.  (Although by now, both nostalgia and academia have come on board, and the genre is referred to as "Dirty Realism.")

And just as I'm thinking this, you get on the train.  But it's not you, but your Japanese doppelganger, looking as you did back in school, with your bobbed hair and pouty lips and slim build.  And I so much want to sneak this woman's photo and send it to you, so that we can both laugh about the coincidence.  But sadly, you passed away last summer...

And with you gone, and with Zielke gone near 20 years, our little gang of aspiring writers lives on only in me.  Does that bring us back to Less than Zero, with Blair and Julian gone, and only I left to tell the tale?

 

On the turntable:  Ramones, "Too Tough to Die" 


Sunday, February 09, 2025

Sunday Papers: Brendan Behan

 

"I respect kindness in human beings first of all, and kindness to animals. I don't respect the law; I have a total irreverence for anything connected with society except that which makes the roads safer, the beer stronger, the food cheaper and the old men and old women warmer in the winter and happier in the summer."

 

On the turntable:  Jefferson Starship, "Dragon Fly" 


Friday, January 17, 2025

Jazz & The Spoken Word, set two

 


 

 With the Joshua Breakstone group, Bonds Rosary, January 10, 2025


On the turntable:  Archie Shepp, "Four for Trane"

 

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Jazz & The Spoken Word, set one

 


 

With the Joshua Breakstone group, Bonds Rosary, January 10, 2025


On the turntable:  Dry Cleaning, "Stumpwork"

 

Wednesday, January 08, 2025

This Friday...

 


 

On the turntable:  Junior Wells, "Calling All Blues"

 

Wednesday, January 01, 2025

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

A year in reads: 2024



 

On the turntable: Cowboy Junkies, "Long Journey Home"


Sunday, November 24, 2024

Sunday Papers: Chris T-T

 

"Rock has remarkably quickly become just a peripheral, niche art-form, lost within the pop diaspora, similarly to what happened to jazz when rock’n’roll happened in the 1950s."

 

On the turntable:  Jack Johnson, "Jack Johnson's Holiday Jams"

 

Wednesday, November 06, 2024

Seeking Adventure in Japan's Newest National Park

 

Another piece born out of last summer's trip to Hokkaido. Thank you to Outdoor Japan and Gear Junkie for putting it together.  

https://gearjunkie.com/travel/adventure-newest-national-park-japan

 

On the turntable: Louis Jordan, "Jivin' with Jordan"

 

Sunday, November 03, 2024

Sunday Papers: Albert Camus

 

"Note that our age marks the end of ideologies.  The atom bomb prohibits ideologies."

 

On the turntable: Desparacidos, "Anonymous/Left is Right"

 

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Tracking the Unseen in the Old Capital

 

 

A nice treat to see my latest article live on The Japan Times...

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2024/10/26/travel/kyoto-haunted-ghosts-halloween/

 

On the turntable:  Phish, "1995-12-07, Niagara Convention Center"


 

Sunday, October 20, 2024

Sunday Papers: Kyle Frost

 

"I feel like most travel writing and promotion in 2024 has one flavor – “Hey, visit here, it’s great”. Influencer culture has narrowed the scope of storytelling, minimizing meaningful reflections and stories in favor of nicely packaged Instagram posts, snappily edited TikToks, and SEO-optimized blogs that are more about appealing to every possible Google search."

 

On the turntable:  Phish, "1994-12-01, Salem Armory"

Monday, October 14, 2024

Sunday, October 06, 2024

Sunday Papers: William Carlos Williams

 

"Memory is a kind of accomplishment." 

 

On the turntable:  Neil Young, "Journey to the Past"

 

Wednesday, October 02, 2024

Venturing into the Garden of the Gods

 

Thank you to the iconic Outdoor Japan magazine for sending me out on a fun and educational journey...

https://www.outdoorjapan.com/activities/travel/venturing-into-the-garden-of-the-gods/ 

 

On the turntable:  Phish, 1993-08-07, Darien center, NY

 


Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Set-jetting with the Shogun

 


 

Thank you to The Japan Times for publishing my latest piece, on a rather timely subject. The print version is expected to appear on Saturday.

 

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2024/09/17/travel/shogun-osaka-castle-travel-historical-sites/ 

 

On the turntable: The New Pornographers, "Brill Bruisers"