The Soul of Summer - Fujirock Festival 2025

Where mountains sing, strangers become family, and music melts into mist




The Naeba Ski Resort in July is a study in alchemical transformation. By winter, it’s a snow-laden wonderland; by summer, it becomes Japan’s sacred ground for music pilgrims. 


As I stepped off at the Echigo-Yuzawa Station—the 90-minute Shinkansen ride from Tokyo already feeling like a ritual—I felt it again: that  tingling sense of homecoming . This wasn’t just a festival. It was a reunion with a valley that breathes music.  


The Stage Is Set: Mountains, Music, and Mist    


Fuji Rock’s irony is legendary: it hasn’t been near Mount Fuji since 1997. After a typhoon-battered debut, it found its forever home in Naeba’s emerald embrace. Here, the Dragondola gondola; the world’s longest) soars over forests, stages nestle between rivers, and the air hums with anticipation. With 12 stages hosting 200+ artists, the 2025 lineup was a masterclass in curation:  


-   Fred Again (Green Stage, Friday) opened with seismic waves of electronic soul  


-   Vampire Weekend   (Green Stage, Sunday) closed with sun-drenched indie anthems  


-   RADWIMPS   (Green Stage, Saturday) fused rock with orchestral grandeur  


-   Field of Heaven, my sanctuary, hosted  Ezra Collective’s  jazz explosions and   Ego-Wrappin'  ’s smoky reveries  


💡  Pro Tip: The Red Marquee hosts secret raves until 5 AM. Follow the neon glow.   


The Real Magic: The Fuji Rock “Tribe”    


I’ve traveled to festivals worldwide, but  nowhere breeds connection like Fuji Rock. This year, our ragtag crew—forged via Jimmy’s legendary WhatsApp group—became a microcosm of the festival’s spirit:  


-   David, (a LA Dad): Our “den father,” handing out anecdotes and dad jokes in equal measure with his ready helping hand and a camera 


-   Amman & Sam (Malaysia/Spain BAs): Masters of crowd navigation. Sam’s “conquest chronicles” (a la Jimmy Olsen) fueled late-night laughs, while Amman cracked us up with quips. 


-   Sooyeon & Ashley (California Design/Dentistry Duo):  drew our crew and kept our smiles bright—literally.  


-   Mai (Tokyo): Our “Golden Ticket” guru. She’s stayed at Naeba Prince Hotel for 8 years straight via lottery wins. Her genuineness was priceless.  


-   Mark (Canadian Teacher): A fellow music nerd, kept the conversation alive with meditation and etymology and NewDay supply runs 

- Evan (British Exchange student) : Another kindred spirit and a festivals nomad, with a cute smile and kind eyes, happily regaled with music stories and helpfully lent me his power bank

- Iresha (an Australian startup techie) : a fellow boarder at the mountain cabin, with whom i shared stories on kangaroo fights and dating perils. Very kindly tagged my teen along on a shuttle 

-   Jimmy (Festival Patriarch): Admin of the 100+ member Reddit/WhatsApp community. His 15-year Fuji Rock streak is a masterclass in joyful curation.  

We were architects, dentists, students, nomads, bankers - united by Naeba’s pulse.   


 A Mother’s Moment:


As a solo parent, am always bracing for teenage eye-rolls. Instead, my 15- year-old was absorbed into the fold with breathtaking grace . Sam and Clara hung around with him.  When crowd packed the White Stage on Saturday, David materialized to get him to the group, “Dads instincts”. At 2 AM, as the Red Marquee throbbed and I was catching a shut eye in the car, the group just took care of him, treated him as one, ribbed him for being tallest and youngest with a kid’s wristband.  No ask, just instinct.  


This is Fuji Rock’s secret sauce: communal care.   It’s why 17,000+ camp on golf-course-turned-campsites, ship tents ahead, or book lodges years early. You’re never truly alone here.  


Survival Secrets & Spiritual Sustenance    


Logistics  matter in this mountain paradise:  

-   Sleep  : Camp (¥5,000) for camaraderie, or book  now  for 2026 lodges (Mitsumata/Shuttle Stop 3 is quieter).  

-   Eat  : Follow the curry bread scent to “Oasis”—30+ global food stalls. The Hokkaido crab soup revived me daily.  

-   Move  : Shinkansen + shuttle bus (¥6,790 + ¥2,000) beats traffic. Parking is ¥5,000/day.  

-   Pack  : Waterproof boots (mud is biblical), reusable bottle (free water stations), and an open heart.  


But beyond practicality lies  something sacred  :  

- Soak your feet in   Kaikake Onsen’s   hot springs as the sun sets.  

- Wander the  “Crystal Palace”   woods for impromptu DJ sets.  

- Dance barefoot in the creek near   Field of Heaven   while Galactic’s horns echo.  


Why Fuji Rock, Indeed?    


In a world of hyper-curated festivals, Fuji Rock remains  wild, organic, defiantly human. It’s where:  

-   Sustainability   isn’t buzzword—it’s policy (“cleanest festival” ethos).  

-   Kids under 15 enter free because music is birthright.  

-   Rain becomes a bonding agent, mud a badge of honour.  


As T.S. Eliot wrote, “To make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.”


As I hugged Jimmy and the others goodbye at 3:30 am on 28th Jul,  under the red and green of Crystal Palace; already plotting 2026—I realized this valley doesn’t just host music. It weaves temporary families  from Tokyo commuters, Malaysian analysts, Spanish ‘chick magnets’; California dentists and Graphic Designers and Canadian teachers. 


We arrived strangers. We left as keepers of a shared story, written in guitar riffs, downpours, and the stubborn belief that  joy is best multiplied 


Fuji Rock doesn’t just rock. It reverberates in your bones.   


Copyright©Neer