Bangkok Post

It’s raining kimonos in Tokyo

Japan Fashion Week kicks off with a wet and wild show

- Story by Jennie Matthew/AFP

It’s raining kimonos in Tokyo. US-based Japanese heavy-metal superstar Yoshiki kicked off Japan Fashion Week by sending models down the runway in sexy, reimagined kimonos drenched in a downpour earlier this week. It may not be high fashion to purists, but such is the fame of the dyed-blonde, androgynou­s-looking co-founder of rock band X Japan that he opened the latest edition of Tokyo’s twice-yearly style bonanza.

Music fans, the Japanese celebrity press and the fashion pack crammed into a catwalk show that opened with a flamboyant­ly dressed Yoshiki seated at his trademark transparen­t baby grand for a classical-inspired duet with a female electric violinist in black stilettos.

To pondering chords on the piano, models dressed in Yoshiki’s collection of traditiona­l style kimonos — albeit crafted in red leather to mimic snake skin or metallic golds and silver — sashayed, or even shuffled, down the runway.

Bolts of lightening flashed overhead and storm sound effects crashed over the sound system as black curtains parted in the middle of the catwalk to reveal Yoshiki standing over a drum set.

He carefully removed his overcoat, then powered through a high-energy drum solo as Western models appeared in strapless, kimono-inspired cocktail dresses that grazed the thigh in chessboard black and white, zebra print with a Dalmatian-print flourish, or pink and red florals.

Rain poured down from the ceiling as models with crimped hair stuck in serpent-like strands gingerly navigated the soaking runway in vertiginou­s stilettos.

Yoshiki played drenched to the skin in a pussy bow blouse.

The climatic look was a transparen­t plastic kimono that left little to the imaginatio­n — exposing the model’s bare breasts and saving her blushes only with a patterned micro, undergarme­nt at the waist.

The rain, Yoshiki explained to reporters, was inspired by Alexander McQueen, the late British designer considered one of the greats of his generation, who soaked his own runway in 1998.

A musician who transcends both the rock and classical worlds, and was raised by parents in the kimono business, Yoshiki said his passion was to open the eyes of the world to the traditiona­l Japanese garment.

“After I moved to Los Angeles 20 years ago, I really understood the importance of Japanese culture,” he explained.

“If I’d stayed in Japan, I wouldn’t have realised there are so many Japanese restaurant­s around the world. I think that is really good, and I want kimono culture to be same as Japanese food.”

The music that accompanie­d the show, he said, was pure improvisat­ion — so busy had he been with a music festival until recently.

“When I played, I focused on the kimono as having the main role,” he said, his blonde hair falling in soft waves around his face, lips accentuate­d in pink lipstick.

It was the musician’s second kimono airing at Japan Fashion Week following his debut last October, also showcasing body-hugging kimonos, also slashed to miniskirt-length and worn with stilettos. Kimonos for men and children are his next dream, he said.

 ??  ?? Creations by Japanese musician Yoshiki at his 2017 Spring/Summer Collection show.
Creations by Japanese musician Yoshiki at his 2017 Spring/Summer Collection show.

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