miu miu | the jazz club tokyo

Miu Miu.

For one night only, Miu Miu turned the neon-drenched reality of Tokyo’s most famous shopping strip completely upside down. Originally established on this legendary Ginza block back in 2011, the brand celebrated the massive expansion of its three-floor flagship by launching the ‘Miu Miu Jazz Club,’ a multi-venue project inspired by Japan’s deep-rooted history of ‘kissaten’ listening cafés. The immersive programming operated as an active, late-night dialogue with the vintage Showa-era nightlife of the capital.

The interior of the boutique frames a warm atmosphere across its three floors, balancing a pale blue palette with solid oak accents. Guests at the opening reception received an exclusive preview of the 2026 Miu Miu Upcycled collection, which debuted ahead of its official global campaign rollout on May 18. Global face cards and creative heavyweights packed out the rooms, placing Jang Wonyoung, Hikari Mori, Asuka Saito, Chara, Haru Kuroki and XG’s HARVEY in the exact same square footage.

Miu Miu.

Miu Miu.

Late-night energy quickly pushed past the shop floor, expanding straight into two of the capital’s most legendary entertainment institutions. The opening musical chapter unfolded at Dance Hall Shinseiki, a beautifully preserved mid-century ballroom where the curation intentionally spotlighted the massive role women have played in driving Japan’s jazz underground since the 1950s. 

Tokyo vinyl selector Lily opened the programme with a warm stream of deep house and forgotten grooves dug up from her residency at Ella Records. Trumpeter and producer Reiya Terakubo followed close behind with cuts from the fresh record ‘Reiya The P.A.V.E.,’ anchoring classic jazz foundations inside modern hip-hop, funk, and R&B frameworks. Closing out the ballroom segment, Grammy-winning pianist Hiromi delivered a wild, kinetic piano performance that played beautifully with the traditional Japanese concepts of ‘ma’ (the artistic pause) and ‘shizen’ (natural emergence).

Miu Miu.

Miu Miu.

Small hours carried the remaining crowd over to Tokyo Kinema Club, an atmospheric theatre famed for its historical ties to classic cabaret and early cinematic history. Underground, beneath the dark, moody rafters, Mercury Prize winner Arlo Parks delivered an intimate headline set, weaving global indie-soul smoothly into Tokyo’s legendary tradition of focused listening. Heading home from Ginza with a classic pastel carrier bag remains a timeless Tokyo ritual.

photography. courtesy of Miu Miu
words. Gennaro Costanzo