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Showing posts with label concept. Show all posts
Showing posts with label concept. Show all posts

Monday, 26 March 2012

Natalie Power Push Interview 19th October 2011 - Part 2 (End)

Here is the second and final part of the Natalie.mu interview on Maaya's three releases at the end of last year. This part focuses on 'Driving in the silence' and it really gives an in depth view of some of the songs. Particularly 'homemade christmas' and 'chikai'. If you have time to comment, please do. I'd love to hear what you think about Maaya's comments and how you feel about the album and songs in general.


Interview/Text by Masaki Usuki
October 19th 2011 

* * *


I can sing a Christmas song that matches my own idea of Christmas

── Finally, let’s look at the album which brings these three releases to a close: ‘Driving in the Silence’. This is your third concept album, continuing on from 2001’s ‘easy listening’ and 2007’s ’30 minutes night flight’.

Every few years or so there will be something in me that says “it’s about time.” ‘You can’t catch me’ was an adventure, collaborating with lots of different people, so with this CD I wanted to try a different way of working. And if I was going to make a concept album next then I wanted it to be seasonal, to be something that completely fell in line with a certain time of year. And the season I like best is winter.

──So you felt the timing was right.

Yes. I really love Christmas but I’d never sung a proper Christmas song before. Somehow it seemed embarrassing, like, is it really ok for a Japanese person to be singing this happy Christmas song? (laugh) I didn’t know how it would sound because I’m not the type of person to put out a love song or party song ‘just because it’s Christmas.’

──’Fuyu desu ka?’ (from 2005’s ‘Yuunagi LOOP’ album) was a bit of a curve ball, wasn’t it?

I like Christmas albums by other artists and listen to them quite a lot but I never thought about doing one myself. But then I thought, well, I can sing a Christmas song that matches my own idea of Christmas. Just putting one song into an album would be a bit embarrassing so right from the start I liked the idea of a full album that you can only listen to in winter.


An image of a minimalist, indoor winter


──My impression of the album as a whole was that it sounded like winter: each and every note sounded like crisp, winter air.

I kept saying to the arranger Shin Kono that the whole album had to be ‘winter’ and he really expressed that wintriness. Even for a single word like winter or Christmas, everyone has slightly different ideas of what they mean. For example, my image of ‘everyone getting together’ [i.e. in ‘homemade christmas’ lyrics] is not a lot number wise, but being in a small room surrounded by the most important people in my life. It’s a very minimalist, indoor image.

──So it’s not a winter going out and having a wild time with lots of people.

No. And after I said that, the musicians were like “Oh, I see, I see” and “Being at home sounds nice”, playing spoons as percussion instruments (laugh). As everyone got into it and came up with a lot of ideas together I think the sound became really interesting.

──Do you usually have an indoor Christmas? Is that what you prefer? 

Yes, it is. It’s definitely what my image of Christmas, New Year and winter should be. Going a bit off topic now but I can’t imagine ever putting out a summer album.

──Ha, ha, ha.

After explaining that “This album is going to come out in the winter” and “This is a winter song”, when everyone played their instruments they all expressed different ideas of what winter was to them individually. And I think that thanks to that you really can’t tell we recorded it in the middle of summer as it sounds so cold (laugh). I was listening to it on my way here and right from the intro it brings winter to you - to the point where I was thinking, “I want it to get colder soon!”

──Do you have an image of the scenery it matches?

Taking a walk in the cold city on a winter night…In my head it’s Omotesando (laugh). That kind of scenery floats up. Also, there are a lot of hand claps on the album, so it sounds to me like everyone is gathered round the fire having a good time. I think it brings a lot of different things to mind.

── Personally, I think the progression of the keyboard in ‘Sayonara Santa’ really makes me feel like it is winter. This is the first time you’ve worked with Rasmus Faber, isn’t it?

Yes, it is. I originally listened to Rasmus’ cover of my song on his album and that’s how I discovered him. I thought his arrangement was really cool. As I was going to be releasing an album in winter…it was a rough image but I thought ‘Northern Europe!’(laugh). I put in a request to him with the simple thought that if I want something that sounds like Northern Europe I ought to ask someone from Northern Europe to do it. And I got the OK (laugh). When we met I was throwing out all these random things like, “It’s winter,” and “It’s indoor.” He replied with something like, “Well, I’ll make some songs then if you like them you can have them.” He sent three songs a few days later. At first I was planning to choose one but I fell in love with all three so I used all of them!


A lot will happen next year but I’m sure we’ll be OK

──I feel like with this album that your style of singing and the arrangements were quite different to your other works up till now. Did you consciously set out to challenge yourself with something new?

I often say this when I make a concept album but it’s like shooting a short film. There’s a storyline, a cohesiveness that moves in a single direction etc. The direction of the whole thing is set so it is like I am playing a character inside that world. I didn’t really set out to challenge myself with something new specifically but I think because it feels like taking on a role it is possible that I was able to show a side of myself that no one has seen before.

──To give a specific example from a sound angle, I was surprised by ‘homemade christmas’ - it has this retro, electric sound that I don’t think you’ve done before.

Even at the demo stage it was a tricky, interesting song. And Mr. Kono’s approach with it was really unexpected – that he had this side to him, to make such an all over the place arrangement! (laugh) It was really fun singing it.

──The melody and the sound both seem difficult but the lyrics are surprisingly straightforward for you, singing about Christmas.

Well, there was a thought that since I’m saying that this is a ‘winter album’ there has to be at least one Christmas song in it. And as a song coming out for Christmas 2011 I wanted to say that “next year a lot of stuff will happen too, but I am sure it we’ll be OK.” It was a song that I sang for the sake of those final two lines. 

To get married is for one of you to witness the death of the other


──This album also contains your second self-penned composition ‘Chikai’. Your first song ‘everywhere’ (contained on her 15th anniversary best of album ‘everywhere’) was created while you were traveling alone in Europe. How about this one?

‘everywhere’ taught me the enjoyment that one can find in composing and I wanted to compose more and more but I never really consciously set about doing it and sort of left it going, “It’ll come to me when it comes.” Then my tour which started in the spring was put on hold and my other work was also put off or cancelled completely…I spent the whole time at home, anxious about the tour and about what would happen in the near future; my feelings were all over the place. After a few days I finally went outside and when I was speaking to people at the office who had gathered for the first time in a while I thought, “Why am I such a standstill?” It was replaced by the thought that “I mustn’t stop creating things.” I don’t have a stage now and I can’t go to the studio but I have to do something! It’s times like these that I have to create something! (laugh) At the time it didn’t really have any lyrics but that is how I composed the song.

──I’ve spoken to a lot of artists recently and all of them speak about the effect of the earthquake.

While winter’s fun with Christmas and everything, the nuance is that it is the season that is waiting for spring; winter is the big trial we all must go through before spring comes. I feel like winter brings something out in me. Every year winter will come to an end, seasons that won’t suit my album will come. But next year winter will come again…In that way, no matter how much I want to stop and stand still I will be swept away, as time moves forward steadily there’s no choice but to be swept along with it. In this song what I wanted to express was that there is no way that I can be left in winter forever. Spring will come and I will live in spring, summer will come and I will have to live in summer. Because no matter what happens winter will end. Someday it will be spring, someday it will be summer. I feel like I must experience all this and bring everything to a proper close with my own two hands.   

── Yes, yes.

I think that everyone sings to get across their own message. I also feel like there are things I want to leave behind in tangible form. I got married recently, and I think that it has come home to me that I will witness the death of someone, the deaths of the people closest to me. What’s someone who just got married doing talking like this? I know, I know (laugh) But I really thought about it, you know. Getting married means that one of you will have to be there at the death of the other. I know I shouldn’t be putting the two together but it’s just like when you have a pet (laugh).  

── Ha, ha , ha, it is (laugh).

Pets are very healing for us but the day will come when we realize we have to bring them into the house to nurse them and so we can be with them and send them off in death. I’m not saying marriage is exactly the same (laugh). But when I thought about it and that my parents and their parents have all lived this same cycle, it really became reality to me. No matter how sudden it is, I can’t allow it to stop me going forward; I have a responsibility that after I have seen that person off properly in death I mustn’t allow my own life to be lost. That’s how it should be, that’s what I thought after all the things that happened in this half year and I think it comes out in the lyrics.


That’s the sound of a pencil hitting the corner of the sofa…


──Did you have any problems creating the melody?

Strangely no. But the song I wrote myself ended up being the hardest to sing (laugh) When I tried singing it I was thinking ‘this is hard, where am I supposed to breath?’

──I see (laugh) But maybe that was in itself something special that wouldn’t be found in the work of a more experienced composer?

Well, when I gave the demo to Mr. Kono, as I couldn’t sing and play at the same time, and at home I don’t have anything like Pro Tools, I recorded just the vocals, then just the piano, everything was separate and I just handed it all over, like ‘here you go’. To demonstrate the tempo I hit the corner of the sofa with a pencil while singing. That sound was kept for the intro of the song (laugh).

──That’s a pencil and a sofa?!

Mr. Kono is always like that, he always takes pains to keep little things, like maybe a piano melody I was tinkering with. This time he kept the sound of me hitting the sofa (laugh). When I listened to the final version it sounded like the hands of a clock and I don’t think anyone would have ever known it was someone hitting a sofa.

──I think know I know it will sound completely different when I listen to it.

Maybe I shouldn’t have said anything (laugh).


Summer exists in my iPod


── You said that you couldn’t imagine putting out a summer album but have you really never made something with a summer concept till now?

(Straight away) No. I don’t like summer.

──So you never get into the summer mood after listening to good music?

Of course I have songs which I want to listen to in summer and there’s even a folder on my iPod labeled ‘summer’ (laugh). But my songs aren’t really included. I don’t think they suit summer. I wonder if I need to sing a summer song for all those people with their parasols up.

──2011 has been high pace for you, what with two albums and two singles. Do you have any ideas for what’s coming next?

I have a general idea of what is happening next year. I’ve actually been making a lot of music for some time, just taking my time on each track. I’m not just churning them out all at once (laugh)!



Fin.



Friday, 17 April 2009

Shounen Alice Album Concept

Continuing the archives from my old site, here is the album concept from Maaya's album 'Shounen Alice' which was kindly translated back in the day by Miyuki.

Shounen Alice Album Concept
'What does one have to do to describe the self well? Gender, age, nationality, race, name, "title". Symbols to fulfill these criteria, we have many of them. But these symbols, how much can they tell of the whole? For example, just within me, a lone human being: masculine and feminine, child-like and adult-like, strength and weakness, tenderness and coldness, such directly-opposed elements exist together.

But if I must mark this disk with one symbol, I think "Boy Alice" will do the job well. Just as all people do, I carry many contradictions and infinities. If I am to express such emotions, then I think these words will do the job well.'