Tokyo This Week: Spring Concerts, Cherry Blossoms, and K-Pop Magic Await Titelbild

Tokyo This Week: Spring Concerts, Cherry Blossoms, and K-Pop Magic Await

Tokyo This Week: Spring Concerts, Cherry Blossoms, and K-Pop Magic Await

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Hey listeners, welcome to your ultimate guide for what to do in Tokyo this week, starting right now on this vibrant Wednesday, April 22, 2026. Spring is in full swing, and the city's buzzing with music, festivals, and cherry blossom magic—let's dive into the highlights so you don't miss a beat.

Kick off today with Kyoko Koizumi's electrifying concert at NHK Hall in Shibuya at 6:30 PM. The legendary Japanese pop icon is bringing her powerhouse vocals and nostalgic hits to this iconic venue—tickets start around ¥29,000, so grab them fast from concerts50.com if you're craving live energy. Meanwhile, Love Psychedelico rocks LINE CUBE SHIBUYA at 6:30 PM too, delivering their signature psychedelic rock vibes in the heart of Shibuya, as listed on japanconcerttickets.com.

The Chiyoda Sakura Festival wraps up its final day today around Chidorigafuchi moat near the Imperial Palace. Picture 230 sakura trees glowing under LED lights at night—rent a rowboat for a romantic paddle or stroll the 700-meter promenade, all free entry according to japantravel.com and timeout.com. It's one of Tokyo's top hanami spots, perfect for photos and picnics.

Tomorrow, Friday April 24, catch Masaharu Fukuyama at Nippon Budokan at 6 PM for anthemic ballads that pack the house, or PornoGraffitti at Fuchu Forest Art Theater Dream Hall at 6:30 PM with their high-energy rock. SHAME brings gritty indie sounds to Shibuya Club Quattro at 7 PM—intimate and fierce.

Saturday, April 25, explodes with aespa at Tokyo Dome at 6 PM; the K-pop queens are set to dazzle with futuristic beats and killer choreography. MUCC performs at Asakusa Kagekijo Theater at 5 PM for visual kei fans, and don't miss the Nakizumo Crying Baby Festival, a quirky traditional event where sumo babies compete in adorable strength contests, per japantravel.com.

Through the weekend, Tokyo Tower's 333 Koinobori carp streamers flutter joyfully at the main entrance until May 6—spot the unique 6-meter sanma fish flag honoring earthquake victims, no ticket needed says timeout.com. Craft Sake Week at Roppongi Hills Arena runs until April 29, the world's biggest sake fest with tastings and pairings from tokyocheapo.com.

Whether you're dancing at Dome shows or sipping under streamers, Tokyo's got non-stop thrills. Stay safe, have fun, and make memories!

Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more weekly guides. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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