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From Tokyo To Tennessee: Japan's Love Of Country Music
Epoch Times ^ | 10/21/2025 | Rebecca Day

Posted on 10/21/2025 8:31:00 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

As country music grew in popularity in America throughout the 1940s and 1950s, the roots of the genre also took hold in an unlikely place: Japan.


A detail from the 1971 album of The Bluegrass 45, a legendary bluegrass band from Kobe, Japan. Rebel Records

During World War II, the Armed Forces Radio Service provided entertainment for American troops stationed in Japan. But in the days after the war ended in 1945, the United States established a more permanent, far-reaching band of stations for its servicemembers remaining on bases in the rebuilding country. Until it was disbanded in 1997, this was known as the Far East Network.

Despite the ban on American music in Japan at the time, there was a local demand for it. Japanese people found ways to tune into Far East Network radio stations to hear singing cowboys and Appalachian banjo pickers. By listening in, they got a formal introduction to country music—to the art of the fiddle and Western twang.

Music Inspires ‘Cultural Exchange’

Japanese culture became increasingly acquainted with American culture during WWII, and country music’s themes resonated far beyond those listening to it in the United States.


A poster for the 2016 documentary "Far Western," which tells the story of the transplant of American country music to post-World War II Japan. This Land Films

Toru Mitsui, author of “Popular Music in Japan: Transformation Inspired by the West,” is featured in “Far Western,” a documentary covering the rise of country music in Japan. According to music site Whiskey Riff, “Mitsui explains how the Western ideals of freedom, individuality, and personal storytelling began to resonate through the music itself.”

It wasn’t just music anymore. It was a cultural exchange.”

A Good Story

One of Japan’s longstanding musical forms, the Enka genre, is sometimes described as “Japanese blues.” The narrative style focuses on lyrical themes like those found in American country music—love, loss, hardship, and triumph—and this helped pave the way for Japanese people to relate to the music of a culture so seemingly different from theirs.

In other words, like America, Japan loves a good story. It is through that love of story that a bridge was built between the two cultures.

Japanese listeners of country music were enthralled by the genre’s artistic tradition of emotive storytelling. They embraced singing cowboys like Roy Rogers and Gene Autry, as well as pioneering artists like Hank Williams and Johnny Cash.

In September 1945, the first radio station for the Far East Network went live in Tokyo: WVTR. The station aired a cowboy-themed radio show called “Chuck Wagon Time” featuring country music. By the late 1940s, the show had grown significantly in popularity. Today, some of Japan’s most well-known singing cowboys were first inspired by the program.

Jimmie Tokita, who adopted his name in homage to American country singer Jimmie Rogers, was a pioneering Japanese country musician who taught himself guitar after listening the Far East Network (FEN). King Records Co.

The influential radio program became a “catalyst for the development of a western or cowboy band movement in the capital city, a function duplicated by WVTQ in the Kansai area (western Japan),” wrote Michael Furmanovsky, professor at Kyoto’s Ryukoku University.

In his paper, “American Country Music in Japan: Lost Piece in the Popular Music History Puzzle,” Furmanovsky noted:

“According to Mitsui, the first ever ‘cowboy’ group was the Western Melodians, formed in 1947 by Toyama Takehiko. … A year later Toyama formed the Western Ramblers and recruited vocalist ‘Teddy’ Hara, a 17-year-old high-school student from a wealthy family who had first encountered cowboy songs on a short morning-time western music show broadcast by WVTR.”

‘Country Gold’


A detail from the front and back cover of Charlie Nagatani's 1992 studio album "Charlie Nagatani Sings Country Gold," which features Emmylou Harris, Bill Monroe, the Osborne Brothers, and Porter Wagoner. termite/Fuji Music

One of Japan’s most popular singing cowboys from the 1950s is musician Charlie Nagatani. Born in 1936, he discovered the genre when he was 20 years old while taking in a night of live music to celebrate his birthday. He quickly fell in love with the genre and began performing with a series of bands, ultimately heading up his own band, The Cannonballs. In 1989, he organized Japan’s first country music festival, Country Gold, held in his birthplace of Kumamoto. The inaugural event drew around 8,000 people, sparking a movement that made it a yearly festival.

In 2013, the international country event celebrated its 25th anniversary and featured contemporary artists who have popularized some of country’s modern classic hits, including Aaron Tippin and the late Daryle Singletary. The 2013 show garnered a 25 percent increase in festival attendance compared to the previous year. Over its tenure, country stars like Dierks Bentley and the Charlie Daniels Band took the stage.

In 2019, the festival opened its gates for the final time after running for 31 years.

But Nagatani hasn’t slowed down. He remains a pioneering figure of country music in both his home country of Japan and in America. He makes the long trek to Nashville on a regular basis, where he has performed many times at the Grand Ole Opry. His Opry performance in May 2025 marked his 30th appearance on the iconic country stage.


Charlie Nagatani during the Academy of Country Music Awards at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas on May 17, 2005. Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

‘Rich Musical Culture’

Over time, America and Japan have developed a symbiotic relationship, with music-lovers of both cultures embracing each other’s tastes and styles.

Today, Rocky Top is a frequented live music venue in the Ginza district of Tokyo. It features country, bluegrass, and Americana performers. The musical hub is named after one of country music’s classic hits made famous in 1967 by the a bluegrass band called the Osborne Brothers.


Bluegrass musicians performing at Rocky Top in Giza, Tokyo.
Jonathan Haynes/CC BY-SA 2.0

Like America, the bluegrass genre also has a significant following with our neighbors in the Pacific. The annual Takarazuka Bluegrass Festival features Japanese performers each year who honor the genre. The festival first took place in 1972, and it is considered to be “the third longest-running bluegrass festival in the world.”

The 2023 Chigasaki Jamboree festival featuring bluegrass music was in part inspired by the father of the genre, Bill Monroe, and his band, the Blue Grass Boys.

Western classical music remains an active part of Japanese culture, and America has since embraced pop stylings emanating from the country.

Lasse Lehtonen from the Finnish Music Quarterly notes the delicate balance that Japan fosters to maintain their cultural autonomy.

“The country has a rich musical culture that today is closely aligned with the West yet continues to explore its own unique pathways.”



TOPICS: Music/Entertainment; Society
KEYWORDS: countrymusic; japan
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1 posted on 10/21/2025 8:31:00 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7lBjY_fHAo

Buck Owens fits on this thread.


2 posted on 10/21/2025 8:47:53 PM PDT by DesertRhino (When men on the chessboard, get up and tell you where to go…)
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To: SeekAndFind
After the war, the Japanese quickly learned how to boogie.

Tokyo Boogie Woogie--Kasaki Shizuko with the Columbia Tokyo Orchestra (1948)

The tune soon crossed the Pacific.

Tokyo Boogie--Moon Mullican (1952)

3 posted on 10/21/2025 8:49:25 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Fiji Hill

I remember this one from MASH

Tokyo Shoe Shine Boy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nC_jf6FUh-U


4 posted on 10/21/2025 8:52:00 PM PDT by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: SeekAndFind

Charlie Nagatani is from Kumamoto where we live . Heard his band and met him some years ago . Not a C&W fan but he was playing locally and a Japanese friend wanted us to go so we did . I don’t see much interest in C&W music amongst younger Japanese .


5 posted on 10/21/2025 8:56:23 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: SeekAndFind
This isn't exactly country-western, but it's most likely inspired by the country-western tune Chattanooga Shoe Shine Boy.

Tokyo Shoeshine Boy--Akatsuki Teruko (1951)

This is a rough translation:

I'm a shoeshine boy with a deerstalker hat and a chest protector, with a maroon tie and a cheerful whistle.
I'm good at dancing and fluent in English.
The young lady that I like hasn't arrived yet, but surely she will come whether it's rainy or windy.
If I shine any shoes, they will shine beautifully; it's a Tokyo specialty.
That young lady in red shoes, wandering around Ginza again today,
Surely she’ll bring souvenirs, chocolate, chewing gum, and Coca-Cola.
The young lady I like, what has kept her away today? Surely she’ll come tomorrow, and someday we’ll dance together.
If I shine, everyone will be cheerful, and shoes will shine beautifully

6 posted on 10/21/2025 9:11:54 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: SeekAndFind

It sure has been a well kept secret.

I’ve never seen or heard of Country music in Japan - not in any news or magazine articles, tv segments, films, whatever.


7 posted on 10/21/2025 9:32:45 PM PDT by simpson96
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To: SeekAndFind

It’s not just Japan. Country music is also popular in England. I took a ferry ride from England to Gothenburg, Sweden in 1992, just so I could say I’d been there.

I was only on the ground for 6 hours. I and a friend walked to a mall near the ferry terminal, and we saw American light trucks everywhere. While walking thru the mall, we saw and heard an American playing guitar and singing. You guessed it, he sang country music.


8 posted on 10/21/2025 9:42:52 PM PDT by jimtorr
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To: simpson96
It sure has been a well kept secret.

Amazing to me too, I worked in Country Music radio here in the states for 40 years and never read or heard about its popularity in Japan.

9 posted on 10/21/2025 9:45:02 PM PDT by Inyo-Mono
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To: jimtorr

Country Festival in Mragowo, Poland 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpOt2K7_Z2Q


10 posted on 10/21/2025 9:50:44 PM PDT by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: SeekAndFind

The Japanese probably never heard Slim Whitman.


11 posted on 10/21/2025 10:13:09 PM PDT by Nachoman (Proudly oppressing people of color since 1957.)
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To: SeekAndFind
During World War II, the Armed Forces Radio Service provided entertainment for American troops stationed in Japan. But in the days after the war ended in 1945, . . . .

Only Americans in Japan during WW2 were POWs.

12 posted on 10/21/2025 10:25:19 PM PDT by 1066AD
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To: SeekAndFind

"Thank God For Country Music" - Hank Sasaki

"A Fool Such As I"

"Amarillo By Morning" - Eric Shi (Chinese?)

"Take Me Home Country Roads" - Nishida Hikaru

13 posted on 10/21/2025 10:38:44 PM PDT by Songcraft
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To: Nachoman

ACK! ACK! ACK!

(That’s a Mars Attacks reference, for those wondering)


14 posted on 10/22/2025 12:39:55 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: DesertRhino

Agreed, Buck does fit here, and he is one of my favorites. Regarding the Girl Made In Japan, I’ve run across some very beautiful Japanese women over the years. Of the Eastern girls, I’d say they are the cutest.


15 posted on 10/22/2025 4:28:29 AM PDT by redfreedom (They’re AWFUL...Affuent White Female Urban Leftists)
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To: 1066AD

I caught that too. Seems like every day a easy to spot journalistic screw up like this is made. Could be a dumb journalist doing this, or most likely AI.


16 posted on 10/22/2025 4:31:25 AM PDT by redfreedom (They’re AWFUL...Affuent White Female Urban Leftists)
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To: SeekAndFind

This isn’t exactly Country, but was a hit in the early 60’s and is one of my favorites:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UIn3lufcZ0&list=RD_UIn3lufcZ0&start_radio=1


17 posted on 10/22/2025 4:39:03 AM PDT by redfreedom (They’re AWFUL...Affuent White Female Urban Leftists)
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To: SeekAndFind

They also have little bars or cafes where there is minimal talking.

Music played on extraordinary stereo systems — vinyl. I’m talking $3-400,000 systems of extreme audiophile quality. Boulder, Nagra, KEF, Bowers. Lyra Atlas cartridges. Silver wires.

Walked into a cafe and drank beer because I heard Texas swing.

Their blues/jazz is also amazing. They fuse with old country.

Watched an anime (believe it or not) called “Cowboy Bebop” (NOT the awful live action version) just for the music. About a Jewish space bounty hunter modeled after the 1960s spy and detective shows. Very Peter Gunn. Great theme song.

Wife was shocked I watched a cartoon and then got sucked into it!


18 posted on 10/22/2025 4:39:56 AM PDT by TheThirdRuffian (Orange is the new brown)
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To: sushiman
I don’t see much interest in C&W music amongst younger Japanese .

What kind of music entertains them?

19 posted on 10/22/2025 4:42:38 AM PDT by LouAvul (Galatians: proof that "dispensationalism" in any form is false doctrine. Salvation is only in Jesus.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Different country, but...

Hearing Loretta Lynn sing “Stand By Your Man” in Germany was semi-strange the first time.


20 posted on 10/22/2025 5:12:37 AM PDT by dagunk
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