Rap star-cum-Japanese Buddhist monk gets grannies in a spin

Meet Akinobu Tatsumi, who fancies music and also preaches about DJing..

June 15, 2018 10:45 pm | Updated 10:48 pm IST - Kagamimachi

Japanese monk Akinobu Tatsumi DJs for music fans at a venue in the forest near Nishihara village, Kumamoto prefecture on January 15, 2018.

Japanese monk Akinobu Tatsumi DJs for music fans at a venue in the forest near Nishihara village, Kumamoto prefecture on January 15, 2018.

Akinobu Tatsumi leads a rare double life as a Buddhist monk who preaches about DJing. He isn’t your typical Buddhist monk; he has long hair, tied in a ponytail, and fancies himself as a human beatbox — a genre also steeped in hip hop culture.

Mr. Tatsumi’s love affair with music began very early — before he was even born, he claims.

“My mother used to hold a speaker to her tummy and play me classical music or 70s disco,” he said. “Later when I discovered those records and played them, I felt I had heard them before, which was weird.”

Since he was a teenager

He has been dabbling in hip hop since he was a teenager and makes clandestine recordings of his own ambient music while his temple, located in deepest Kyushu, western Japan, sleeps. “I was influenced by hip hop - I started listening to Run-DMC and Public Enemy,” said Mr Tatsumi, nimbly sidestepping the issue of rap music’s explicit lyrics. “I got into beatboxing in that way. I used to practise on the edge of a cliff, where there was a lovely echo.”

After keeping his nocturnal hobby a secret from fellow priests for years, the 38-year-old Tatsumi now gives record-spinning tips to his ageing temple-goers. “It’s true a monk does usually deliver a regular sermon,” Mr. Tatsumi said at Syousanji temple.

“When I first began playing the grannies music and showing them how to scratch, they did look a little bemused.”

“Around here people call me the funky monk,” the wannabe DJ added in an interview after chanting a sutra.

Mr. Tatsumi’s digression from Buddhist writings to scratch sermons was fraught with risk - he also says he kept his monastic life hidden from night-time venues he played at. “I didn’t tell other priests about my music but also hid the fact I was a priest from bars and clubs,” he said.

Mr. Tatsumi takes care not to anger his fellow priests, using headphones when he mixes his music — which combines electro and dubstep with Buddhist chanting — to avoid getting into trouble.

Even when he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis four years ago, Mr. Tatsumi persisted with his hobby, making music from his hospital bed. “I used to use the beep-beep of the heart monitors to make club music,” said Mr. Tatsumi, who now walks with a cane.

The one-time skateboarding monk believes his illness has brought him closer to his fellow devotees. “I suddenly felt a connection with the aged and temple-goers who were suffering from illness or injury,” he said and cheekily added “These days I get on famously with the old folks!”

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