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Leonieke Scheuble in Japan

Courtesy Courtesy of the artist
Performing in Japan was an absolute honor and a life-changing experience.
Leonieke Scheuble
As someone whose passion for jazz developed when I lived in Japan in the mid-1960s, I was fascinated to learn that keyboardist

Leonieke Scheuble
pianoIlan Eisenzweig
guitarJohn Michalak
saxophoneThanks to Japanese organist

Akiko Tsuruga
organ, Hammond B3b.1850

Atsuko Hashimoto
organ, Hammond B3There were also opportunities for jam sessions, and one was with Japanese guitarist Hiroshi Hata. "We first saw him at the Expo in Osaka playing with saxophonist

Harry Allen
saxophoneb.1966
Nick Marshall
tromboneAnother highlight took place in Yokohama where the organist Midori Ono invited Scheuble to come onstage and perform a duo organ piece with her "two organs facing each other. That was so much fun!"
The 23-year-old Scheuble estimated that her band performed eight to 10 sets a week at the Expo for a total of about 80 performances. "After each performance, we would take photos with many people from the crowd, and they would often present us with gifts. One of the most touching experiences I've ever had occurred on the last day of our performances. We were into June, and monsoon season had just begun. The rain was heavy, yet when we looked out into the crowd of umbrellas, we recognized many of the friends and familiar faces we had come to know. They bid us farewell with handwritten notes, desserts, and gifts of all kinds." (The musicians were covered, but the audience wasn't).
Although jazz is an original American art form, it's clearly more popular outside the countrynot only in Japan but throughout the rest of the world. "Performing in Japan," said Scheuble, "was an absolute honor and a life-changing experience. I cannot wait to return again sometime soon."
Tags
Rising Stars
Leonieke Scheuble
Sanford Josephson
Ilan Eisenzweig
John Michalak
Akiko Tsuruga
Midori Ono
Atsuko Hashimoto
Yuki Hyoda
Hiroshi Hata
Harry Allen
Yutaka Terai
Nick Marshall
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