(May 3, 2007) Keiko Matsui has been
touring the world as a jazz pianist for years. Her instrumental
melodies have inspired crowds all over the world. She has
released approximately twenty records and her newest CD,
Moyo, seems to be her best one yet! PCM's Julie Kissane
talked with Keiko Matsui one afternoon about her experience
as a Japanese composer and the release of her exciting new
album.
Julie: How are you, are you doing well?
Keiko Matsui: Fine, thank you, I'm traveling
a lot but I'm doing fine.
J: Where are you right now?
K: Mexico City.
J: Wow, that's amazing. How's the weather
down there?
K: Hot! Where are you?
J: I'm in Delaware, so the east coast.
I've been looking up a lot of information about you online
so I'd love to start shooting out questions to you if you
don't mind?
K: Sure, sure!
J: Great, I understand you were born in
Japan and you're mom was actually the first one that took
you to your first piano lesson, correct?
K: Yes, yes, that's correct.
J: Right, so when did you feel that you
were beyond piano lessons and you knew that entertaining
and making music was something that you really wanted to
do?
K: Actually, I never thought about becoming
a professional musician or anything, I was a good student,
I was so much into studying and school so I was a busy student
but somehow very naturally, in the elementary school era,
I started composing more tunes and writing diaries whenever
I saw beautiful scenery or something special happened to
me, then I wrote a tune. So that's why I started to compose,
but as far as taking private lessons, I didn't imagine that
I would write tunes for a living.
J: So this was something you feel like
you almost gradually became passionate about?
K: I think so, especially after making my
own album and the way I compose all the songs but the way
I compose is very mystic process and that convinces me to
write so it is very, for me, a very spiritual time. Writing
the tunes and also performing at the concert is as a musician
is like therapy and I can feel we connect with each other
through the music. The U.S. and Japan and traveling to South
Africa and many countries, I really feel that music is a
gift from God or somebody from the universe to make us unite
together.
J: I actually saw a quote that you had
written, "We are connected by music, as the oceans
connect the continents," and I thought that was a great
quote and it holds very true so I do agree with you. Do
you find differences or do you see similarities between
Japanese audiences and American audiences and how they react
to your music?
K: Actually, sometimes even in the US, each
city has difference audience and crowd but I felt when I
played in South Africa, they are the most passionate audience,
I thought. I was at a festival outside and when I start
playing, I heard everybody singing and most my tune is an
instrumental tune and no lyrics. I was wondering, "why
they were singing?" and then I found out that from
the second melody they started singing along to the melody,
either humming or saying, "keiko, keiko, keiko matsui,"
and it was unexpected and it was amazing and I felt so much
passion towards the music from them.
J: That must make it even more special
for you when you have such an audience that's so interactive
with you that's really taking something out of your music,
that's great.
K: Compared to Japanese, they are, very kind
of shy, but basically I think when people listen to the
music, I think we are the same. Sometimes the expression
is different and American audience is more natural and they
show their feelings compared to Japanese. Like when I played
in Russia, it was like a very formal type of audience. But
at the end, they applauded and they didn't stop clapping,
it was very special when they were going, "Bravo, bravo."
And it was very nice.
J: Are you still visiting Japan these
days, back and forth?
K: I live in U.S. and Japan so I go back
and forth. I live in Toyko.
J: Got it, do you miss it when you're
gone?
K: I enjoy tour so much and the schedule
I have. Somehow I am charged and people smile and give me
the energy to keep running, I think.
J: Can you remember some of your first
impressions about America when you came here to the U.S.
to record an album?
K: Actually, I didn't really. When I first
recording in U.S. that was magical planning. We had a great
time and it was a magical time.
J: So you enjoyed that whole process?
K: Yes, I enjoyed it. But for this new album,
I had another, well the greatest time, producing the album
by myself and had great recording progress so I was very
happy about that and it was the highlight, I think. This
was the first time I produced myself and it was a very exciting
project I had. It was a great experience.
J: Do you enjoy being on tour and performing
live, do you enjoy that aspect more than recording an album
and being in a studio, which do you prefer?
K: It's hard to compare. With recording,
it starts from writing the material and building up the
tunes for each song and inviting musicians. But, I'm enjoying
performing too.
J: Speaking of touring and traveling,
you met George W. Bush in 2002, is that right?
K: Oh right! I was invited to a welcoming
party and it was very nice.
J: Let's talk about your latest album,
Moyo, which you recorded in South Africa.
K: It's an African word in Swahlia, meaning
"heart and soul," and it has many meanings.
J: That seems like it was probably an
amazing experience. {I had the chance to study abroad
and chose Australia over South Africa and it's a place that
I would personally love to visit.}
K: Oh really? Well, I've been performing
there for four years or so, but I had never spent enough
time there. This time I produced and spent some more time
and I was there writing new material for a few weeks and
I could see more scenery, people, cultures and the days
influenced me to write the songs.
J: So you think that environment {in South
Africa} helped you produce this record, and maybe if you
were in a different spot, it could have come out sounding
different?
K: I think so because so many any tunes came
to me while I was there to compose and at that time, I started
to record in South Africa and inviting great musicians for
drums, bass, guitars and percussion and all these people
became new friends and I had a great beginning of the recording
process.
J: Do you think you'll ever go back?
K: I think so, we are planning to go back
to do a few special concerts in different cities for Moyo.
J: Do you have a favorite song on this
album {Moyo}?
K: All of them, of course!
J: Can I tell you my favorite?
K: Yes, please, I want to hear.
J: Mine was "A Great Romance."
I felt like it sounded like a relationship and a great Hollywood
romance, just in music form.
K: Ahh! I'm so happy to hear that! That whole
melody came to me the first day of writing.
J: Do you find when you are writing songs,
that most of the time they will just come to you or do you
write them in pieces?
K: Sometimes in pieces but sometimes, like
A Great Romance, the whole thing will come to me. I do need
to concentrate and have a quiet special time with the silence.
I have that time to sit in front of the piano and then just
begin to write things down. I start from there and after,
I collect enough to create an album.
J: Keiko, if you had to collaborate with
any other artist, whether realistic or not, is there someone
you've always wanted to work with?
K: In the near future, I'd like to have a
full orchestra. I had an opportunity before to do an orchestra
show and maybe just to do that in the future would be great.
J: Where else to do you see yourself and
your career going within the next five years? That sounds
like a job interview question, I know!
K: I hope Moyo reaches more people and probably
continue traveling.
J: I have one last question for you! I
am a college student, how do you think your type of contemporary
smooth jazz music can relate to the college crowd? I had
listened to it to relax and de-stress.
K: Maybe you can make a new category of music,
like "Keiko's Music." For me, music has no borders
and I don't mind the title but my music has many elements,
sometimes classical, sometimes jazz. I don't care about
the name.
J: I think for college students, Moyo
could be an album to just wind down with at the end of the
day or help as background music when studying!
K: I'm happy to hear that. Actually, one
Russian skater use my music and one actually won the Gold
Medal while she skated and won the gold medal! It was a
great moment seeing her on TV.
J: Well Keiko, I really appreciate your
time and good luck with your upcoming concerts and music.
I really appreciated this interview and thought you were
just lovely!
K: I look forward to seeing this online!
Thank you!