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The Hibiya Open-Air Concert Hall (Japanese: 日比谷野外音楽堂, Hepburn: Hibiya Yagai Ongakudō) is an outdoor theater in Hibiya Park, Tokyo, Japan. [2] There are actually two concert halls - the smaller was erected during the Meiji era, and the larger was first built in the Taishō era.
It was converted to a park and opened to the public on June 1, 1903. [2] On September 5, 1905, a protest at the park against the Treaty of Portsmouth, which ended the Russo-Japanese War (1904−1905), erupted into the Hibiya riots. The major citywide riots lasted two days, with seventeen people being killed and 331 arrested, as well a large ...
Naon no Yaon (Japanese: NAONのYAON) is an annual all-female music festival held at Hibiya Open-Air Concert Hall in Tokyo, Japan's Hibiya Park.Created and "produced" by heavy metal band Show-Ya, performing artists and staff members are restricted to females, but attendance is open to everyone.
April 29 – The Naon no Yaon Music Festival is held in Hibiya Park, Tokyo, Japan, with the customary all-female line-up, including Show-Ya, Chiaki and Rika Matsumoto [8] May 26–28 – The Seoul Jazz Festival takes place in South Korea.
The area along Hibiya Street (National Route 1) from Yūrakuchō to Uchisaiwaichō is generally considered Hibiya district. Administratively, it is part of the Yūrakuchō district. There is no actual administrative district in Chiyoda called "Hibiya" but the name is used in some local place names such as Hibiya Park and Hibiya Station ...
Tokyo Midtown Hibiya (東京ミッドタウン日比谷, Tōkyō Middotaun Hibiya) is a 190,000-square-meter (2.0 million sq ft) mixed-use development in Yurakucho, Tokyo, Japan. Completed in March 2018, the project includes office, commercial, and dining and entertainment facilities.
B-Boy Park: Hip hop festival: Concert on the Rock: Rock festival: Cosquín en Japón: Folk festival: Fuji Rock Festival: Rock festival: Heart-Aid Shisen: Rock festival: 2008: Live under the sky: Rock festival: Loud Park Festival: Heavy metal festival: Mount Fuji Jazz Festival: Jazz festival: Naon no Yaon: Rock festival: Hibiya Open-Air Concert ...
Tokyo Motor Show 1960s. The show, originally called All Japan Motor Show was first held in an outdoor venue called Hibiya Park, the show was considered a success with 547,000 visitors over ten days and 254 exhibitors displaying 267 vehicles, [2] but of the 267, only 17 of them were passenger cars as the show was dominated by commercial vehicles.