Harry Aoki is interviewed in the Bulletin, a journal of Japanese Canadian community, history and culture

John Endo Greenaway is the editor of Bulletin, published by the Japanese Canadian Citizens' Association of Greater Vancouver,
celebrating their 50th Anniversary in 2008.  There are two feature interviews about Harry in the July/August 2008 Bulletin.

Harry Aoki - a life of music

Jul 5th, 2008 | By John Endo Greenaway | Category: 08.07.July 08, Lead Article

The following article incorporates interviews done with Harry Aoki in 2001 and 2008. Some of the following has been printed previously in The Bulletin.

Read Interview Here

It is common wisdom in these times of increasing globalization and shifting job markets, that the concept of having one career over the course of a lifetime has gone the way of the typewriter and the rotary phone. Instead, young people entering the job market are told to expect to have as many as four or five careers (or more) between the time they leave high school or university and the time they retire.

If that is the case, then Harry Aoki is light-years ahead of his time. At the age of eighty-six he can look back on roughly a dozen careers. As he admits, he may have forgotten a few. He has been a composer, recording artist, conductor, impresario, efficiency expert, orchestral arranger, logger, teacher, ski instructor, musicologist, traveler and band leader, among others. And he’s not done yet. Despite recent health problems, he still maintains a busy schedule and continues to search out new challenges.

read more at: http://jccabulletin-geppo.ca/lead-article/harry-aoki-a-life-of-music/

Interview: Harry Aoki

Jul 5th, 2008 | By John Endo Greenaway | Category: 08.07.July 08, Featured

I sat down with Gary Cristall and Harry Aoki last week at Nikkei Place. Gary is writing a book on the history of folk music in Canada and had been wanting to talk to Harry for quite some time. When I invited him along, he jumped at the chance. We covered a lot of ground in the course of our conversation and the following is just a portion of what we talked about.

JEG I You were involved in a redress movement in Alberta right after the war, something I’d never heard of before.
Yeah, that was . . . that was a tough one, you know. There was this Justice Bird. Lot of brain. You know, photographic mind and photographic reading, and the attorneys were arguing, you know, arguing their cases, and he’s looking at this evidence, you know, he’s going like this, slowly (mimes turning pages), and he’s reading the darn thing. It’s in his brain.

JEG This was like a mini redress movement, then?
Yeah. This is when people were allowed to leave and to move around, and it got some people like the Ohamas started. They moved to, what it’s called, Rainier. And others did about the same sort of thing. They were very successful as farmers, they were good farmers. So, yeah, that was the first redress. It was just a handful, you know, able to do something about it. They had to have a few bucks themselves too, you know.

read more at:
http://jccabulletin-geppo.ca/featured/interview-harry-aoki/