Mar
N0412 for my speical
Posted by Yuka as City Tokyo
When I start making a song, for one second I see an amazing view—and in that instant, it cracks and falls to pieces. Then the rest of the process is trying to put the pieces back together. So when it feels familiar, when I see what I saw in that moment the song was conceived, then I know it’s done.—Utada
Hikaru Utada is one of the biggest pop stars in the universe. Over the last ten years, her accomplishments in Japan are simply staggering. Her 1999 debut First Love is the country’s biggest-selling album of all time, and three of her albums rank among the Top Ten best-sellers. She has had 12 Number One hits, including four songs in Japan’s all-time Top 100. 2001’s Distance had the largest first-week sales for any album in Japanese music history, selling an astonishing three million copies. In total, the young singer has sold more than 52 million albums.
But unlike most pop starlets around the world, Utada is also a songwriter and producer; indeed, she says that she thinks of herself as a composer more than as a performer. And on This Is The One, her new Island Def Jam album [featuring ten self-penned songs produced by the powerhouse producers Stargate (Ne-Yo, Rihanna, Beyonce) and Tricky (Britney Spears, Madonna, Mariah Carey)] 26-year-old Utada reveals the unique sense of songcraft that is poised to make her a force in the US and European music communities.
“I wanted to make something that’s accessible but not cheap-not low-class or stupid, but still appealing to a wide audience,” says Utada. “I like to make music that’s multi-layered. You might like a song and want to dance, but not really dive into the lyrics and analyze them. And then if you’re more bookish and you like words, you might notice the references I make, to Captain Picard or Freddie Mercury or Winona Ryder.
“Both things are just as important to me-to be catchy, so when you hear a song on the radio it sticks out, and also to have that depth.”
In conversation, Utada is endlessly surprising, instantly shattering any expectations or stereotypes. The list of heroes and influences that she cites-from the Cocteau Twins to Conan O’Brien, from author Roald Dahl to the Notorious B.I.G.-is unpredictable but extremely telling. “I like smart people,” she says. “Not whether you’re educated or not, just whether you have that spark, that light in your attic.”
Born and raised in Manhattan and educated at Columbia University, Hikaru Utada grew up surrounded by music. Her father, Teruzane Utada, was an accomplished musician and producer, and her mother, Keiko Fuji, was a successful Japanese enka (ballad) singer. Utada spent her youth shuttling between New York City and Tokyo, but her most consistent home was the recording studio. By age 11, she had written and recorded her first song, and by the time she graduated from junior high school, she had been signed by EMI Records; her first album, Precious, was recorded in English, but didn’t come out in the US because of business problems at the label; it was subsequently released in Japan.
After moving to Tokyo full-time, she began recording in Japanese, and her debut album in that language, First Love, was an explosive, historic success. Since then, she has had five Number One albums in Japan-most recently, HEART STATION in 2008, which was the year’s best-selling non-compilation album.
With that level of popularity, it’s easy to wonder why Utada is taking the difficult step of starting over as a new artist for a new audience. “It’s true that I could have stuck to my throne and taken the easy way,” she says, “but I felt that my creativity, my humanity would be endangered by staying in that position. I don’t want to just be this crazy artist who lives in la-la land, I want to be in touch with the real world and stay humble. And I like it when something feels scary-I see fear as a guiding light.”
Utada did make one earlier foray into the English-language marketplace with the EXODUS album n 2004. But even though the singles “Easy Breezy” and “Devil Inside” were hits on the club charts, she views the new album as her true debut. “On that album, I was so insecure,” she says. “I was trying too hard, it wasn’t natural. But on This Is The One, there’s a maturity, a more free-flowing and natural confidence.”
In approaching the new album, Utada was very careful about choosing her collaborators and setting their expectations. “With both teams, I wanted them to lay out the basic tracks,” she says, “but I told them that I have to write my own songs, with complete control over melody and lyrics.”
by:Berydrego
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