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あゆね 'YURA'

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Gazette Interview Neo Genesis Vol.21




Please share the impression you had of the person sitting to your right when you met for the first time.
Okay, starting with Aoi-kun. The person next to you is Kai-kun.
Aoi: Why do I have to start (laughs). When I first met Kai-kun...
Ruki: You thought he was a skeleton?
Reita: Kai-kun, why does that make you embarrassed?
Aoi: When we first met, I had given him an MD with one of Gazette's songs at the time on it. Then he made a face like, "That's sudden!" and left looking like he had stolen it.
Kai: I didn't do that (laughs)
Aoi: He did that, and when I asked, "Kai-kun, you're joining us, right?" he was like, "No, I'm still thinking...".
Reita: Like he was being pressured by other bands, too (laughs)
So your first impressions weren't very good?
Aoi: Rather, I didn't really have any. But Ruki had brought him along, so there wasn't any helping it.
(laughs) So next to Kai-kun is Ruki-kun.
Kai: Ruki was very kind.
Ruki: What did I do?
Kai: Even though we hadn't talked that much, you gave me a wallet chain.
Ruki: Ahh, I did. So it's just that I gave you something!?
And what was Ruki-kun's first impression of Uruha-kun?
Ruki: When we first met, he was onstage with his makeup on, so I got the impression that his face was totally white and he had a big back. Well, he had a delinquent older brother kind of image. His car was like that, too.
Uruha: Hahaha...
Ruki: But he seemed really nice, so I was thinking, "I'm not sure~". Since he had that makeup on I thought he couldn't be that normal, but we were actually able to talk normally.
So he was different from that image, huh. So, next to Uruha-kun is Reita-kun.
Aoi: Wait a second. Your first impressions would be a looong time ago.
Reita: Yeah, at that time the band didn't have anything to do with it.
Uruha: It was during middle school. My first impression was that he was like a monkey. He was small and dark.
Reita: I was really tan.
Uruha: And he had a buzz cut. He was really agile, and expressed things with his whole body.
Reita: Like (Ninety nine's) Okamura, huh?
Uruha: Yeah, yeah. Like a clown.
(laughs) Okay, Reita-kun, what was your impression of Aoi-kun?
Reita: Right, we met just after new years.
Ruki: I remember that.
Aoi: You don't have to talk (laughs)
Reita: I think you were wearing a red and white sweater?
Ruki: Yeah, and it had a knitted reindeer on it.
Aoi: Cause it was winter.
Reita: Then when we met again, you had on a fur coat.
Ruki: It was a long coat, right?
Reita: Yeah. I thought, "Damn, this person has nice clothes" (laughs)
So a gorgeous feeling, huh.
Aoi: No, I don't think gorgeous...
Reita: The prices were reasonable (laughs)

Please tell us the personality of the person sitting to your left.
Okay, starting with Aoi-kun.
Aoi: So why is it always me (laughs). Umm, Reita is naturally funny. When a live starts, he creates the atmosphere.
Reita: Of course.
Aoi: He's shy and tries to be cool. But he's a good guy, and hard to get close to.
(laughs) How about Reita-kun of Uruha-kun.
Reita: He has no conception of time. I don't think he's ever heard the phrase "Time is money". I guess he goes by his own pace and is in his own world. Today was the same (he was late), too...
Uruha: Wait, are you mad?
Reita: No, I'm just saying that's how far you're in another dimension. But, he's a good guy.
All: (laugh)!
Now Uruha-kun about Ruki-kun's personality.
Uruha: He's dumb. Not stupid, but dumb. The difference being that he's a specialist in his own areas, but other than that...
Ruki: Isn't that the same as stupid?
Uruha: Well, he's a good guy.
(laughs) Now Ruki-kun of Kai-kun.
Ruki: I don't know his real personality well, but basically he has good manners. Though I've been starting to wonder if the real him isn't hiding somewhere behind that.
All: Ahahaha!
Ruki: I guess he's actually a very nervous person? He worries too much and gets nervous.
Okay, Kai-kun of Aoi-kun.
Kai: He's really methodical. Especially with keeping his surroundings clean.
Aoi: That's not true. My room is dirty.
Kai: No, you notice really small details. Like when I'm doing something I'll start cleaning up because I think "Aoi-kun's gonna get mad."

What dramas or movies have you seen lately?
Reita: It's a foreign drama, but "LOST". I've only seen the first season, though.
Ruki: Eh~?
Reita: People get pulled in by puzzles. We want to know why something turned out the way it did.
Kai: But you didn't want to watch it at first.
Reita: I really didn't want to watch dramas that continue so long. But then I wondered if that itself was what was interesting about them. And it was. With LOST and Prison Break.
Ruki: I like Prison Break. I also definitely didn't want to watch long dramas. I thought, "Just stop already". It's so long, and there was also a second series...but then when I watched it once when everyone was watching it, and I completely got hooked on it. To the point that when work was over I'd go home and watch it instead of sleeping, and go to work the next day like that. I don't think of it as a drama as much as a huge movie.
Uruha: I like "Blood Diamond".
Leonardo DiCaprio was in that one, right.
Uruha: I watched it because my sister recommended it, though.
Reita: Isn't it kind of rare for you to listen to your sister?
Uruha: She told me about it after we had done something that had to do with jewlery. I thought she was tricking me, but I watched it and it was soo good. It really made me think.
Kai: I saw "The Prestige". I love movies with a twist, so I was really looking forward to it, but I looked forward to it too much and I was kind of disappointed...
Aoi: I...don't have anything~

Please tell us about your hometown.
Ruki: The air tastes good. There aren't any people.
Reita: It's open and there are a lot of farm and rice fields.
Uruha: The convience store parking lot is big.
And what about Mie?
Aoi: The scenery is beautiful. It was even in a magazine a while ago.
Kai: Even though it's Tokyo, there's a huge temple close by, and my school was in there~
Aoi: Like a temple elementary school?
Ruki: Where the hell did you live?

How do you wake up every morning?
Ruki: With the manager calling me on the interphone.
Aoi: With the manager calling me saying, "I'm here now".
Reita: I'm woken up like that, too.
Ruki: Today, even though the manager was there, after he called on the interphone I fell asleep again. After that the plumber came so I woke up, and it had been about an hour. I was like "Oh crap!", but when I looked at my phone no one had called, and when I tried calling he didn't pick up. So I took my time getting ready and when I went outside, the manager was out there sleeping.
All: Wahahaha!
Reita: That's amazing!
What about Uruha-kun?
Uruha: With the morning light.
Reita: You're such a liar~ (laughs)
How much of a country kid are you (laughs)
Uruha: The sun's light really comes in strong, though
(laughs) So what about Kai-kun?
Kai: Vibration
All: Heh...(laughs)
Kai: I've realized recently, but rather than have an alarm go off in my ear, it's easier to wake up to vibration.
Aoi: (coldly) Is that so.

What do you do when you're depressed?
Reita: I sleep.
Ruki&Kai: Me too.
Aoi: I sleep until I can't anymore.
Reita: Whenever I wake up I'm usually okay again.
Uruha: I drink. Then I get violent and go to sleep.

What faces do you use in cell phone messages?
Aoi: I don't.
Ruki: The sparkly one.
Uruha: The one I use the most is the one that looks like smoke.
Reita: Ah, me too. I use it when it's a "hmph!" kind of feeling. Like, after saying "I'm tired~" I don't want to use a sad face or sweat drops, so I go "hmph!" (laugh)
Aoi: Who do you send that kind of message to?
Ruki: I've gotten one.
Aoi: You've been around each other this whole time!
Ruki: Then I sent back "I know--!"
What about Kai-kun?
Kai: I use the one bowing on the ground.
Aoi: The ones with symbols, huh
So does that mean you apologize a lot?
Ruki: I guess it does?

What is your ring tone at the moment?
Aoi: A regular ringing.
Reita: I have one like that, too
Uruha: The sound of water dropping, and whatever came with it.
Ruki: I have a warning sort of siren.
Kai: (Looks at his phone to check...and plays it)
Ruki: Like the sound on the black tea commercial.

If you could do a collaboration with anyone in the world, with who and what kind of collaboration would it be?
Reita: A PV with Steven Spielberg. I love Jurassic Park.
Uruha: Eh, it would have dinosaurs?
Reita: I would like it to have an outer space feeling.
Ruki: I would want Bjork to sing in a chorus.
That's extravagant.
Uruha: In the same way, I would want to be a member of Slipknot.
Kai: A person named Mike Portnoy (drummer of Dream Theater) is very into drums, so I would like to make a drumset with someone like that.
Aoi: I would want to with a car seller. Cars today tend to look the same, so I want to do a collaboration and make a really cool one. And become rich.
Ruki: Oh?

What is something that you can't buy it now, but someday you want to?
Kai: A house.
Ruki: A house for my parents.
Reita: A house I think.
Uruha: A car maybe?
Aoi: A company.
Reita: So, bribery? Cool (laughs)

What do you think is going to happen this year?
Ruki: A short hair cut.
Uruha: Smoking ban.
Ruki: That's already here!
Since you can't smoke in taxis anymore, huh
Uruha: That's true
Aoi: So it's already here, then (laughs)
Reita: Lowered gas prices.
Ruki&Aoi: That's not happening.
Reita: The democrats are moving, though.
Ruki: It looks like it'll change from George Bush.
Aoi: Not it looks like, it will change.
Reita: His term is over.
Ruki: It looks like Hillary will happen.
Kai: Of course, the GazettE will.
Aoi: We will, huh. Or rather, we are.

What's something you want to do in private this year?
Aoi: I want to go overseas. L.A. maybe. I could go to Korea for a short vacation, too. When I travel I like it to be for vacation, so first I want a vacation.
Ruki: I want to take pictures. I talked with a cameraman who said I'd like it if I tried it.
Uruha: I want to find a sport I can do during the summer. Maybe something like futsal that I can do indoors.
Ruki: Alone?
Reita: So why would it matter if it was summer or not?
Kai: I want to play futsal, too. I've turned down invitations from my friends so many times.
Uruha: Then I won't do it (laughs)
Reita: I think swimming.
Ruki: You definitely won't do it.
Reita: There's a sports gym nearby [OK and this part I don't know. If anyone knows what ループー is, prease tell me *severely confused*]...
Aoi: So couldn't you just go to a pool?
Reita: There is a pool (laughs), so I thought maybe I should try it. I want to go "It feels soo good~" like Kitajima Kosuke. And I don't know how to breathe right, so I want to learn that, too.
Wasn't your swimming style just to put on a mask and crawl?
Reita: Yes. I could go 25 meters without breathing, but I really want to learn how to swim properly.
I'm sure everyone would like to watch you practice.
Reita: I'd come up with a frantic expression.
Aoi: That'd be pretty pathetic (laughs)

Please give some pointers on how to sing Gazette's songs in karaoke.
Ruki: Gazette's song are pretty hard~
Reita: I went with Uruha and a friend to karaoke, though. My friend tried singing "BEST FRIENDS", but messed up the rhythm halfway through, so I started thinking maybe it is kind of hard (laugh)
Ruki: Well, what's wrong with it being like that? People shouldn't try to copy the singing, just sing it in your own way.

What is the first thing you do when you return home?
Ruki: I turn on the lights and take a bath.
Reita: Turn on the air-conditioning.
Uruha: Turn on the TV. Then quickly change into a jersey.
Aoi: Turn on my game.
Kai: Either the TV or computer.

What do you do to relax when you're tired?
Aoi&Kai: Sleep
Ruki: Take a bath then go to sleep.
Reita: Eat, then go to sleep within 30 minutes.
Uruha: Drink
Kai: All you do is drink (laughs)

What is something you want to ask the fans?
Ruki: That's a different kind of question.
Uruha: Is everyone going to school like they should?
Reita: At what kind of times do you listen to Gazette's CDs?

What do you think is the greatest luxury?
Reita: Falling asleep again. That feeling is incredible!
Aoi: That's true. When someone calls you on the interphone, and you go back to sleep.
Reita: That feels good!?
Does it annoy you when someone calls on the interphone?
Aoi: It does (laughs)
Uruha: For me it's an onsen. Relaxing in hot water, then having a beer afterwards.
Kai: When I can drink sake from the afternoon on.
Ruki: For me, going to Hawaii was a luxury. The atmosphere of having a drink at night and looking at the scenery from the terrace of the hotel. The wind felt good, and listening to rockabilly on my iPod...
Did you get roomservice?
Ruki: No, I ate beef jerkey (laughs)
Reita: At school, when it closed for a while because of influenza, and I could sleep more. That's amazing.
Uruha: It is, huh~
Ruki: When the sports festival was cancelled because of rain.
Uruha: What part of that is a luxury? (laughs)
Ruki: Isn't it nice to wake up expecting to have to do something, then being able to go back to sleep?
That's kind of insignificant, though
Ruki: Hahaha. ...Ah, but I already said Hawaii!

What do you like to put on sunny side up eggs?
Aoi&Kai: Mayonnaise.
Reita&Uruha: Ehhh?
Uruha: I haven't heard that! I like salt.
Reita: Salt or soy sauce.
Ruki: Ehhh? I use Worcester sauce.
That's the most normal, huh
Aoi: No, no, no, no. Normal would be salt or pepper. Why would Worcester sauce be normal? Do you use it?
No, I use ketchup or mayonnaise.
Uruha: Ehhh?
Ruki: Ketchup and mayonnaise are good.
Aoi: That's what we put on our hamburgers at home.

What do you wish you had done when you were a teenager?
Ruki: Gotten my drivers license. I really wonder why I never did that.
Uruha: Seriously, why didn't you?
Ruki: And I had so many chances to go, too. I want to completely change that "If I have time to go to the driving school, I'll play instead" kind of thinking I had at the time.
Aoi: I would have liked to take the college entrance exams.
Ruki: That's a lie.
Aoi: I didn't graduate high school, though.
Reita: Aren't you getting the order wrong?
Aoi: I just wish I had been able to at least go to college~ Kinda thing. I'm kidding, though.
Kai: For me it's piano. My mom played, and we have a grand piano in our house, so I wonder why I never learned it. I tried it once, but then I gave up.
Reita: Because he's a thoroughbred.
Aoi: Well, it's not too late, so why don't you start now?
Kai: But the drums...
Aoi: Couldn't you do both~
Uruha: For me it's English. I wish I'd have learned it while I was at the right age. My English grades were always a 5 on the 5-point scale.
Ruki: ...I guess you can repaint the past, huh
Aoi: We can say that cause there's no one here that knows.
Reita: But I've never heard that from Uruha.
Aoi: Rather, I've never heard you speak English.
Reita: That came out of nowhere. [a joke: "nemimi ni mizu" means "out of the blue/out of nowhere". but instead of saying "mizu" he said water in English, lol]
Uruha: Ehh?
Ruki: Your timing of that was weird
(laughs) What about Reita-kun?
Reita: I went to an industrial high school, but I wish I had gotten qualifications from there. I didn't get any.
Uruha: Then why did you go?
Kai: Huh? Didn't you say once you were getting a permit to handle dangerous machinery or something?
Reita: I failed.
All: Wahahahaha!
Aoi: So it's not that you wished you had done it, you couldn't.
But didn't you say that getting a permit like that would basically guarantee what you did for life, so you didn't want to?
Reita: Yes. And now that I think about it, it wouldn't have been anything like that. And guarantees like that are important.
All: Wahahahaha!
Ruki: That's an adult way of thinking (laughs)
Aoi: No, that is important, though

What was your first part time job?
Ruki: A family restaurant.
Reita: You can work at places like that?
Uruha: In the kitchen, right?
Reita: There's no way you'd say stuff like "irasshaimase", right?
Ruki: I did say it. Like, "rasshaimase".
Reita: Bastard (laughs)
Ruki: I quit after a day, though
Kai: I also worked at a restaurant.
Reita: I made the cream at a bread factory. My hands looked like globes.
Ruki: It's the same now.
Reita: What do you mean??
Uruha: I worked at a flower shop. It was my friend's shop, and I worked there during the summer vacation and got a lot of money.
What about Aoi-kun?
Aoi: Rather than a job, it was more like helping out. In about 3rd grade I cleaned pearl oysters and got about 300 yen a day.

If you were to compete in the Olympics, which event would you do?
Uruha: I would want to do that half-pipe~ (in snowboarding)
Ruki: I want to do the ski jump, and turn around really flashy.
Uruha: Eh, turn around?
Aoi: Can you finish like that?
So you want to jump, then?
Ruki: Ah, actually I would want to do figure skating.
Reita: I would want to do the hammer throw. Take a good look at it, and it looks like if you don't let go of the hammer you could practically keep spinning forever.
Because of the centrifugal force, huh.
Reita: I would want to try it once. Throw it and yell.
Kai: I can't do it, but in things like judo it seems like it would feel really good in that one deciding instant.
It's okay, everyone's talking about things they can't do (laughs)
Aoi: I would want to do the 200 meter
Why that half-hearted? (laughs)
Reita: Isn't it 100?
Aoi: That's it (laughs) They run with such amazing expressions.
Ruki: "Wo~w, player Aoi is making an amazing expression!"
Reita: They wouldn't say that (laughs)

What was something a girl told you that made you happy?
Reita: You make me feel soo good.
All: (after a second) wahahaha!
Uruha: True...
It feels good like Kitajima Kosuke, right?
Reita: Of course.
Then, seriously (laughs)
Ruki: "I can relax"
Reita: "What do you want to eat?"
What situation would that be in?
Reita: It's not like I'm asking to be spoiled, you know? In a "Should I make something?" kind of way.
Uruha: I like "What are you doing today?"
Reita: Eh? You want to be asked that? (laughs)
Uruha: I want her to care.
Reita: Ah~ You want her to wonder what you're doing.
I understand that feeling. What about Kai-kun?
Uruha: Something like "Stop it"?
Kai: (laughs) No, like "It's fun (being with you)".
Aoi: I would want to be told "I like you", but not with phone messages or anything.

What kind of occupation would you like to try out once?
Ruki: Boss
Aoi: Manager
Uruha&Ruki: No way.
Ruki: If I was the manager of these members, I'd be pissed off everyday.
Aoi: If it was these members I'd definitely hit someone.
Kai: After talking to someone experieced in carpentry, it sounded interesting, so I would like to try that.
Aoi: It is interesting.
Uruha: I would want to be noticed for being the chef of a famous, beautiful restaurant.
Reita: A celebrity. Like how we're talking in this kind of way, whenever I watch variety shows the celebrities have to pay attention to who's doing what and what they're saying. I would want to try being in that kind of pressure. There's no chance I'd get any laughs, though.

What food makes you think, "The times I eat this are the best!"
Ruki: Foie gras
Reita: You're a celebrity, huh~
Kai: Crab
Aoi: Is crab that good? If you just went on a "crab spree", all you would get is crab.
Reita: That's because it's a "crab spree" (laughs)
Uruha: For me it's eel kamameshi.
Reita: Monjayaki. I can make it at home.
That's more economical. What about Aoi-kun?
Aoi: Steamed white rice.

What do you think makes up a popular guy?
Ruki: Maybe someone who's good at talking?
Aoi: Someone like Ruki-san would be popular.
It's true that people who can talk well are popular, though.
Uruha: I think someone with a strong impact when you first meet them.
Reita: Whenever I listen to Ishida Junichi talk, I think someone who imitated him would be popular.
Kai: Someone who can read the atmosphere?

Please give two of the first four character phrases you think of. It's a personality test.
Ruki: Fall seven times, get up eight. Once you suspect, everything is suspicious.
Reita: Enemies on all sides and happiness, sadness, anger, and joy are the only ones I know!
Kai: Ten people, ten colors. Someone loved by everyone
Aoi: I don't know~ Around the clock? With heart and soul.
Uruha: Do a good deed everyday, Once in a lifetime
The first one you said was your view of life.
Ruki: Oh, mine's optimistic
And the second one is your view of love.
Ruki: Ahh, mine might not be wrong (laughs)
Kai: Someone loved by everyone?
Uruha: That's you (laughs)

Please share your feelings when you hear, "Recording starts today!"
Aoi: Ehh, I don't wanna--
Kai: Noo!
Ruki: No--
Reita: Depression
Uruha: Troubled...

What is something you definitely do before a live?
Ruki: I put my hands together on stage [pray]
Uruha: Stretch
Reita: I read fanletters
Aoi: Play guitar
Kai: Clear my mind

What do want to praise yourself for concerning last time's recording?
Aoi: There's nothing to praise I think.
Reita: Rather than praise, I want to tell myself, "Let's work harder!"
Ruki: I learned a lot? That's all.
Uruha: I want to praise myself for finishing at midnight on the second day.

How would you recommend "Guren" to someone who doesn't know Gazette?
Uruha&Ruki: It's a good song.
Reita: Listen to it without thinking anything.
Aoi: Find it at the store and buy it.
Kai: It'd be good if you listened to it once.

What do you think you'll be like in 10 years?
Uruha: Growing a beard?
Kai: I want to be the same!
Uruha: Well, I guess I'll look the same, but I want to have gained more experience and be more intelligent.
Ruki: I want to be bigger [as in well known, lol]
Aoi: In ten years, I would want a kid. No, I'm pretty sure I'll have one.
Reita: Well, even if ten years go by, I still want to be saying weird stuff and laughing about it like this (laughs)

Interview With Alice Nine




--First off, congratulations on completing your fan club only tour "Kacho Fugetsu Vol. 1."

Everyone: Thank you!

--How was it playing for the first time in front of your fan club members?

Sho (Vo.): It was our first time in front of only the fan club so we got a chance to do something different from our normal shows, to show the audience more of what we're really like. Despite playing at the rather large Shibuya O-East, overall I felt like we were able to get closer to the hearts of our fans. Everyone in the band got a chance to talk or MC. It might have been a little tedious to the crowd, but we felt really at home (laughs). I don't know how I should put this, but I'm just glad we got a chance to play catch with the crowd.

Nao (Dr.): I'd say that it was an easy show for all sorts of reasons. I think we were able to try a bunch of things because we were playing in front of our fan club. I was glad to see that everyone welcomed us more warmly than I thought they would.

Saga (Ba.): It always feels like it's us one-on-one with the audience, but with the fan club show it felt more like the members were working with each other, member-against-member (laughs). From the band's point of view, we were able to show the audience the same everyday selves that we show each other. It was fun.

Tora (Gt.): We thought a lot about the show since it was our first time in front of our fan club. It felt like we were trying to grope for something. It was like; this time let's give them everything, a show, a talk, a hand-shaking party. I think it turned out great. I'd like to plan more events like this in the future.

Hiroto (Gt.): Lately we've gone from expanding our base to releasing an album, and then finally a show. I feel both the crowd and the band were able to grow closer since our first show in a while was in front of our fan club. I think it was a great opportunity.

--You released your first full-length album as alice nine. on April 26. Did you play any new songs from the album at your fan club only show?

Sho: The only song we played was the lead-in track "Velvet" at our Tokyo tour finale. I think our fan club members compose the core group of people that come to our shows. We decided to try "Velvet" because I wanted our fan club to hear what we were thinking as soon as possible. I wanted them to understand what we were doing and respond accordingly.

Nao: (Whispering) "And now it's up to you!"

Sho: Yeah, yeah (laughs). We want our fans to continue developing. We're throwing the question out now, and we're looking forward to seeing the answer at our second solo tour "Kimi no Hitomi ni Utsuru wa Zekkeishoku."

--How did the crowd respond after hearing the new song, "Velvet"?

Sho: How, indeed. We were still feeling the high from releasing our first album, so I think we thought the song sounded cooler than it actually was. We were a little drunk on ourselves (laughs). The crowd, of course, was full of the people who have been following us the most, so they still got into it. But more so, I'd say we it was more about us feeling good about playing the song.

--How was it for you, Nao?

Nao: "Velvet" is the lead-in track to the album, so we wanted everyone to hear the song as soon as possible. We played it live with the hope that people would quickly come to like it. With our second solo tour "Kimi no Hitomi ni Utsuru wa Zekkeishoku" we want to play more songs that show off how we've improved like "Velvet." We want the crowd to get into the new songs.

--Saga-san . . . or would you prefer to be called Saga-SAMA?

Everybody: (Laughs)

--It seems like everywhere one goes people are calling you by that name. (Laughs).

Saga: Nope, you don't have to use "Sama" (Laughs).

[ This interview was conducted directly after the members had returned from another event. Each of the members seemed pretty tired with the exception of Saga who seemed down right exhausted ]

--Saga, you look really tired. Are you all right?

Saga: Uh, I'm OK. I'm OK! (Laughs)

--How was "Velvet" live?

Saga: Personally I felt like we were overflowing with power, spewing out energy. However, I think we had too much energy and ended up whiffing. I couldn't get enough of the rush. Instead of playing the song for the crowd, I think we were having fun. We came at it more like a beginning band would. (Laughs)

--How was it playing bass on "Velvet"?

Saga: Well, instead of playing it normally, how should I put this . . . it was like I could see myself performing live while I was still in the studio recording. I felt like I had jumped out there and started playing.

[You can't tell from this transcript, but Saga was unusually tired on the day of the interview. It took him at least a minute to say the previous line]

Sho: (Whispering to Saga) You're taking forever! (Laughs)

Saga: I know (laughs)! Next time I'd like to do more rock staging. (Laughs)

--Thank you (laughs). How about you Tora?

Tora: To tell the truth, we wrote "Velvet" with the original intention of performing it live. Frankly, we wanted to play the song. If you were to ask me the essence of the song, I'd have to say that the song is our flesh and blood. Just playing it live I could feel it.

--Tell me an interesting story from the fan club only tour.

Sho: Did anything happen?

Tora: This wasn't really much of a tour. We didn't move around much and didn't stay anywhere. I guess we could start with Nao . . .

Nao: Did I do something!?

Tora: Well, uh (Laughs). Someone got left behind at the rest stop on the freeway.

Nao and Sho: Ha ha ha ha (Laughs).

--The most interesting things seem to happen to Nao.

Tora: Yes (Laughs).

Nao: I was plotted against . . . probably (Laughs).

Tora: I kept thinking, "He'll be back any minute, He'll be back any minute," but he just wouldn't come back.

Sho: Nao always has to use the bathroom at the most important times.

--Now that you mention it, Nao was the only person to go the bathroom right before this interview.

Nao: Yeah (Laughs).

Sho: Everyone got antsy thinking, "He'll come out now . . . now!" but he just wouldn't come out.

Nao: So I'm a couple of meters from making it back to the car and they start leaving! I was like, "What?" I think they knew all along.

Everybody: (Laughs)

Nao: I've actually been left behind before (Laughs).

Tora: Yeah.

Sho: When we went on tour with other bands on our label . . . no one even noticed. They even took roll call. But we said, "Don't worry about it!" (Laughs)

Nao: Saga even sat right next to me on the bus. I felt like, "Hey, watch out! Didn't you see I wasn't sitting next to you?" (Laughs)

Saga: After we left I thought, "Hey! Nao's not here!"

--You didn't notice even though you're part of the same rhythm section? (Laugh)

Saga: Yeah . . . I do wonder why I didn't notice that time. (Laughs)

--OK, now I'd like to ask you a few questions about your new album "Zekkeishoku." When did you first start talking about releasing a full-length?

Sho: Just after the middle of last year, I think. We showed off our heavy side with "Kowloon -NINE HEADS RODEO SHOW-" and showed off our pop side with "FANTASY," so we had this vision of releasing a full-length album where people could easily get a feel for the alice nine. sound. That was in fall of last year.

--How did you feel when you decided to release a full-length?

Tora: To tell the truth, once we decided to put it out I was a little nervous. We'd never written a full-length in one sitting before, and it wasn't like we had a lot of songs sitting around that we played live. We thought up everything right up to the deadline and then went straight into recording. But we were able to see where we wanted to go explicitly because we worked this way. It was like, "Oh, that's the type of album we wanted to make." When we finally got around to making the album we didn't rut about at all. It just popped right out.

--So you were nervous at the start.

Tora: Well, this was our first time making a full-length album. Of course, we were also really happy to have the chance to make a full-length. We've always wanted to make a full album, and now we were finally starting. So, nervousness and hope flitted about our eyes. (Laughs)

Sho: I guess we were nervous because it was this unknown world, an unknown number of songs and we couldn't see what to do. I think that actually making a full-length album is one of the steps in becoming an artist. It was finally time for us to express what we are as artists through a full-length. Like Tora said, we were most certainly nervous at first, but once we were able to express what we wanted to do, what we thought felt good, we were able to increase the magic that happens between band members and really proceed with the album. Personally, I really think we made something great.

Hiroto: When we decided to record the album I thought, "It looks like the time has finally come for our band." I think of a full-length as the sort of thing to be released once I've found the appeal of the band, once I've found a band I'm ready to wage my life on, and I've spent enough time together. I was irrepressibly happy once we started creating. alice nine. isn't the sort of band that keeps a bunch of songs in stock, we make each song at the right time with a hundred percent of our energy. When we first created our double singles "Kowloon -NINE HEADS RODEO SHOW" and "FANTASY," we had a solid idea of what we wanted to do, so when we started writing songs after that, we already had a foundation of two songs to work off of, and were able to create more freely. Our latest album has let me feel like we've reached the best point so far in our music-making career.

Nao: First of all, I thought, "at last." I was a little nervous since this was my first time recording this many of songs. But I was excited once we finally started recording. Songs started changing from their demos, and I was excited about what the songs would turn into. Likely, everyone felt the same. I think we were able to create an album everyone could agree with and at the same time expand our hopes for the future. I was surprised how little nervousness Hiroto showed, he was always like "Leave it to me!" Very reliable.

Sho: Hiroto isn't a negative type of guy. Whatever mess the band was standing in, Hiroto was there in full fervor. Always moving, he put positive energy into the band. As a result, everyone really gave it their all, and we've become a great band.

Hiroto: You're embarrassing me. (Laughs) Well, I knew someone like Nao was there to cool us down if I got a little to feverish, so I was able to push everyone further with ease.

[ Saga has now reached the peak of exhaustion ]

--I'm sorry to trouble you when you're tired, but could you wake up, Saga?

Everybody: (Laughs)

Saga: Hey, I'm awake! (Laughs)

--Well then, sorry to trouble you but, would you be kind enough to mention when you were first of the persuasion to release an album.

Saga: Yes, when we . . .

Everybody: The royal "we"! (Laughs)

Saga: Ha ha, (laughs). So I had sort of thought that you just have these songs you put on an album, and then you take a couple of songs and put them out as singles. So, to put out two singles and then a full album, it felt like we had squeezed out these two singles and now we had to squeeze out even more. So I went at it like my last stand thinking, "There's nothing to lose!" "There's nothing left!" (Laughs) I didn't have anything built up in side of me, so I had to work on what I had seen, what had influenced me. I went in rough, without forcing it. But once we'd finished the album, I came to think, "Wow, we still have it in us. I could keep going. We could probably still make another album."

Sho: Once we'd finished the album Saga grabbed an acoustic guitar in bliss and started singing, "Heeeeey, We finished, the aaaaaaaaalbum." (Laughs)

Saga: We'll be exposing that footage on the net soon. (Laughs)

Everybody: "Exposing?" (Laughs)

--I see, I'll be looking forward to it. (Laughs) Now that you've released a full-length album, you could say people have something to judge the band with. What concept did you use to direct the album?

Sho: We've never been a concept band, so we emphasized whether people would become more excited after hearing each new song on the album. Not every song is a single, of course, but we wanted each song to have that type of energy. The only thing we did decide on was to try to give each and every song character.

--I heard like this time you were going back to your roots.

Sho: At first we wanted to make an album that was visual, that was a blend of the West and the East in the best sense of the phrase. Albums are like business cards for bands, so we put out "Zekkeishoku" as an answer to the question, "what is alice nine?" We wanted to express that concept. You certainly won't feel the East-West blend just by listening to the songs, but with the art design, our costumes, lyrics, and compositions, everything combines into an overall East-meets-West style. We wanted people to feel the beauty of viewing Japanese culture through the eyes of a foreigner. However, we also want to expand our repertoire. We don't want to stop here either.

--How did you illustrate this "return to your roots" through this album?

Hiroto: I'd say through feeling. I wanted to go back and express the excitement of when we first decided on the five members of the band, the shock of first forming a band, and the confidence at the start that we could absolutely put out something interesting. Being our first album, I could also say this was a compilation of everything we've done up to this point, but I also think there are things that begin only after this point. We wanted the people who are hearing us for the first time through this album to think, "alice nine's a really fun-sounding band." We also wanted the people who've been with us the whole time, the fans who know us, to feel excited listening to this album.

Sho: I could say the overall theme for this album was "going back to our roots," but I could also say it was "rich color." We set out to get people excited with color and when someone asked whether we were going back to our roots, we were sort of like "sure."

Tora: Instead of saying that we made this album to go back to our roots, I'd say, and this is standard I guess, but our main thoughts were "In order to create tomorrow, we can't forget what we've done up to this point." If you only keep your eye on tomorrow and do whatever you want, you're bound to fail. You have to reflect on your experiences up to this point and then head forward. That's what this album is about.

Nao: When we first formed the band we made the concept of "East-meets-West" a pillar of our style. Up to this point we've expressed a lot of styles of music, a lot of styles of visuals. For our first album, we wanted to make "Zekkeishoku" a combination of our original intentions for the band, to create a work founded on the progress alice nine. has made together.

Saga: More than a return to our roots, "Zekkeishoku" was us looking back on all we've done to this point and ultimately defining what we want to do as a band. (Laughs) Now that I think about it, I guess our main concept for the album was to have people think "alice nine." once they'd heard the album.

--Of the twelve songs on the album ten songs are new. Can you tell me the whole story about how you chose the songs on the album, including the new songs?

Sho: First of all, we always start with a meeting to choose the songs. There we decided on the basics, "Velvet," "Haru, Sakura no Koro," and "jelly fish." The first time we met we wanted to start with all of the good songs. Once we had that axis, we tried to spread out the feel of the album. We gave bonus points to slower tracks or songs with interesting tricks to them, and then we met again and confirmed the twelve songs you hear on the album.

--How did you decide on the order--starting with "Corona" and ending with "ARMOR RING"?

Tora: Sho primarily decided the song order. When I saw the order though, I thought it was great. Or, more succinctly, "this is how it has to be." Additionally, when Hiroto recorded the sound effects he intended for them to come in around the fourth track. In that regard as well, I think the track order turned out quite well.

Saga: The album turned out just how we imagined it. I did feel like the sound effects used for the fourth track could only have been placed right there. It felt like the track list came together in exactly the way we had wanted.

Nao: Since Sho's the guy who writes the lyrics we figure that he is also the most suitable person to arrange the songs in order to reflect their lyrical meaning. Personally, I wanted to have a single come within the first three songs of the disc, to have a lively new song for the second track, and to have a contemplative final track. And all my preferences were granted. Otherwise we went with whatever Sho had.

Hiroto: We originally wanted to use the sound effects for the first track. After we started working on the album, however, we started making a lot of great songs and it became difficult to justify using the first song for sound effects.

[ Suddenly Sho, who is sitting next to Hiroto, begins caressing Hiroto's hair with his finger ]

Hiroto: Wha!? What!? (Laughs)

Sho: Nah, nothing. (Laughs)

Hiroto: Ha hmm. (Laughs) Yeah, so we felt that the first song needed to bring in the start of the album. From there we had to bring the album to the final track, the grand "ARMOR RING." We were able to realize a song order that we thought was really cool. Even the fact that the sound effects came in on the fourth track was very alice nine. I think we have the songs in a good order.

Sho: Basically, I tried putting the songs in the order I thought they should go. Alice nine. doesn't really thoroughly discuss things, but we do understand a lot through feeling. We aren't strict with the sounds on our songs; we mostly work off of feeling until we're like "that's good."(Laughs) I think the same holds true for the song order. I've honestly never thought, "this just won't work" with something alice nine. has done. In that respect, I put the songs in the order each song was calling for, and I'm glad we were all able to agree with what I made. I also felt that the album should begin with a cool song, not sound effects.

--Your credits list the composer for every song as alice nine. Is there a reason why you don't list the original composer's name?

Sho: I wouldn't say we don't list the composer's name. We all tend to contribute to the songwriting. If one person did create a song from start to finish, we'd, of course, list that person's name in the credits. But we do all contribute to each of the tracks. That's alice nine's style.

--I see. However, I imagine there are fans out there that wonder which band member came up with the original idea for particular songs. I'd be very happy if you could tell me who was responsible for each song.

Sho: (Looking at the tracklist as printed on a piece of paper before him) Ummmm, Hiroto, Hiroto, Hiroto (Laughs). "FANTASY," "3.2.1. REAL-SE-" are also Hiroto's.

Tora: Hiroto also did "Haru, Sakura no Koro."

Sho: Saga wrote "DEAD SCHOOL SCREAMING." Then, "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-" was also Hiroto. "jelly fish" is Saga. And then Tora, Tora, Tora. "Tora Tora Toraaaaaa."

Hiroto: Tora Tora Tora.

Sho: "Tora Tora Toraaaaaa" for three songs. Then the last song is Saga.

[Complete Songwriter List]
Corona: Hiroto
Velvet: Hiroto
FANTASY: Hiroto
3. 2. 1. REAL -SE-: Hiroto
Haru, Sakura no Koro: Hiroto
DEAD SCHOOL SCREAMING: Saga
Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-: Hiroto
jelly fish: Saga
World End Anthology: Tora
Q.: Tora
Kowloon -Nine Heads Rodeo Show-: Tora
ARMOR RING: Saga

--Now that I've had a chance to look at the list, it seems like Tora writes a lot of the harder songs.

Tora: Yeah, I'm sort of responsible for the harder songs. If we're going to put out a song like that, it'll probably be by me. (Laughs)

--Saga contributed three songs to the album. Is there a particular type of song you try to write? "DEAD SCHOOL SCREAMING" is a hard song but "jelly fish" has more of a lyrical tone. Then "ARMOR RING" is a ballad . . .

Sho: (Jumping in) Adult!? Sexy!?

Tora: (Quiet and plainly) I think he said "ballad."

Sho: Oh, ballad . . . I thought I heard him say "adult."

Everybody: (Laughs)

--Sho really seems to respond to "adult." (Laughs)

Sho: If you want to hear about adult, I'll tell you! (Laughs)

Everybody: (Laughs)

--Should I cut that? (Laughs)

Sho: No, it's OK. (Laughs)

--So anyway, I feel like Saga makes a variety of songs.

Saga: Uhhh . . . this time I looked at pictures and tried to flesh out the image. I couldn't tell you who made the pictures, though. (Laughs) Oh, and certain CD covers, but each of the three songs was based on the work of a different band. I looked at the lyrics and artwork from the band and then came up with something of my own. Each of my three songs on this album started that way. I tend to write music as though I am drawing a picture. However, I present the songs to the band at the rough sketch stage, before I've added any color to the track. Then we each paint the track with our own color and out comes a complete track. To go back a little, that is why we list the composer for all of our songs as alice nine. Personally, I prefer to list the band name in the credits.

--A lot of the songs come from Hiroto this time.

Tora: Yes. Hiroto's the type of person that will do a lot if he can. He's amazing when he's in the zone.

Hiroto: I'm a straight-ahead type of guy. When I write music I move forward with whatever I'm feeling at the time--the songs come from what I've felt and what I'm feeling at the moment I'm writing. The songs just flow out of me when I have enough stimuli.

--You tend to write beautiful songs.

Hiroto: Oh . . . really?

--Yes. Both "FANTASY" and "Corona" are fine. I think you utilize the vocals with your songs.

Sho: Hiroto tends to make hard-to-sing songs. (Laughs) He's the one who sets the hurdle for me. Then I think, I've got to get over it, and sing something to counterbalance his song. I've improved with some of Hiroto's songs.

Nao: Me too!

Sho: So, Hiroto's also pushed along the drums. (Laughs) Hiroto's the most severe with his compositions. Our band has this idea of what we want our finished songs to sound like and Hiroto always writes toward that. In order to get over Hiroto's idea of completion, the band has to focus and do our best.

Hiroto: Personally, I try not to settle into a safe pattern, I'm always looking for stimulation. I wouldn't say I'm always trying to push things forward, more like I'm trying to break things down--I don't like tranquility. I guess I do the same thing with my songs. A lot. (Laughs)

--I'm sure each of your songs turned out exactly the way you wanted it. However, if you had to choose one song you'd like to push, which would it be?

Hiroto: I'd say "Velvet." I feel like the band is in a really good place. It feels like we are stimulating each other, pushing ourselves further along. Precisely because the band is in that place, we were able to make "Velvet." I used to think about this back when I wanted to be in a band: when I first joined a band, if I was able to make a band I thought was cool, I wanted to make a song like "Velvet." We're making a music video for the song right now and it's sort of a "look how cool a five-piece band is" or really, "this is what band-life is all about" kind of video. I want people to see the video and discover what is so attractive about bands.

--Can you tell me what the lyrics to "Velvet" are about?

Sho: I spoke with Hiroto and we thought the theme was "fire." Fire is hot and dazzling--you can keep setting fire to a burnt-out candle. It may quiver in the wind, but fire continues to put out a strong light. Alice nine. wants to do the same thing to our fans, warm and lighten them up. Fire also has a destructive image. We wanted to tell people to destroy all that is worthless, as well.

--What song would you recommend, Tora?

Tora: They are all good songs so I really can't choose. My personal favorite song for the melody and lyrics would have to be track number 5, "Haru, Sakura no Koro." When we were making the song it was still a demo, we hadn't put the finishing touches on it yet. Ultimately, I played guitar for it without knowing how the melody would turn out. But when we'd finished, I listened to the song and thought, "this is a really great song."

--Which guitarist has influenced you the most?

Tora: I just play whatever I want, so there isn't any one guitarist who has influenced me. I've been influenced by a lot of people.

--I feel that the song "Haru, Sakura no Koro" is a rare sort of song for alice nine.

Tora: We tried a bunch of new things with this song in regard to the sound of the band. I noticed that there weren't that many guitar phrases when Hiroto first brought the song to us. However, I looked forward to seeing what sort of song it would turn into.

--What about the lyrics for "Haru, Sakura no Koro"?

Sho: I was moved when I watched the film "Ima, Ai ni Yukimasu" last year with Hiroto. I usually write my lyrics with a scene of what I think the music sounds like in my head, but with this song, the first two lines, "Kizukeba, itsumo soba ni atte tozen to omou yo ni natte / Onaji da ne, mitekita fukei mo kurikaesu atatakana kisetsu mo sakura no hana mo, (I noticed it feels normal to have you by my side / It's the same thing, isn't it? We used to see the landscapes, the repeating warm seasons, the cherry blossom flowers too)" just came to me. All of that scenery comes from "Ima, Ai ni Yukimasu," I just expanded it more with the lyrics. I don't have that same experience of losing a loved one, but I've learned a lot about other people's lives from novels and films. It's helped me study feelings and imagery.

--What song would you recommend, Saga?

Saga: Uhhhhh, I have reasons to recommend each of the songs I've written, but if I had to choose someone else's track I'd have to say song number 10.

Sho: Number 10, "Q. (Question)"!

Saga: It really feels like a question.

Everyone: (Laughs)

--Could you explain that a little more for us? (Laughs)

Sho: I love this. (Laughs) Go ahead. (Laughs)

Saga: What can I tell you? (Laughs)

--It has the simplest ending of any of the songs you've released up to this point. (Laughs)

Saga: That's, well. I've already asked a bunch of people but . . . what did you think after hearing the song?

--Overall, I felt the influence of Western music in the tone of the chorus.

Saga: Ah! I mean what stood out the most.

Sho: Ha ha. (Laughs)

--Hmmm, the start. It just breaks right in.

Sho: Uh, the melody . . . did you notice anything about the melody?

Saga: So, did you notice anything while listening it? It's like a . . . "question"! (Laughs)

Everyone: (Laughs)

--Melody, eh. Well . . . I thought it sounded hard, but--

Saga: Hmmm, I see. I guess so . . .

--And the bass is really aggressive.

Saga: Are you serious? I'm glad to hear it, but is that your final answer? (Laughs)

--No, but, I'd like to hear Saga say it himself. (Laughs)

Saga: Oh, I just thought you hadn't gotten this far into the song yet. Um . . . Ummmmm, I see. (Laughs)

Everybody: (Laughs)

Saga: I'm not sure if I'm happy or sad. There's a fine line, you know. So . . . I sang a part on the song.

--Really! Where!?

Saga: During the chorus. I'm really glad no one has said "Oh?" yet. (Laughs)

Sho: After I sing "Nani wo shinjiru no ka," Saga sings "Nani wo ai suru no ka."Then we harmonize in the next phrase.

--How was it to try singing?

Saga: I can't objectively listen to my voice. Even now, after we've released the album, I'm sad to say that I'm embarrassed (Laughs). It's still a good song; I'm just too shocked at hearing my own voice. As for the song, I think it's the newest type of song for us to show up on the album, and I'd like to put out more in the future. (Laughs) But really, no matter how many people I ask, no one seems to notice me. (Laughs)

--I'm sorry. (Laughs)

Saga: It's fine. (Laughs)

--What about the lyrics, Sho?

Sho: When I heard the demo for "Q." for some reason I thought about mitochondria, like a picture of a cell viewed through a microscope. Then I thought, I have a very interesting brain for thinking that up. (Laughs) So, then I thought about how human beings are connected from father to child, and what exactly is our purpose within this majestic lineage of things. I sang about the doubts that spring up inside of me.

--You sing in English on this song as well.

Sho: Tora makes stylish songs, so I end up wanting to put in some English. I'm the type of person who tells people to cherish the Japanese language, but this song cried out for English. The melody as well--"Q." has a unique melody that could only be expressed in English. The song asked for aggressive lyrics, and so I wrote aggressive lyrics.

--Nao, what song would you recommend?

Nao: Ummm . . . ok, the first song, "Corona." Speaking specifically of the drums, I tried out something new with the song. There's a fusion of live drumming and drum machine sounds. We also used this approach in our February single "FANTASY," but "Corona" is an evolved version. It's hard to hear clearly, but we combined live drums and non-live drums together into a really cool sound. I'm happy with the way it turned out. The whole thing came to Hiroto after he wrote the song. At the last minute he said, "hey, this is different from the rhythm that we had in the pre-production stage, but I think we should try this," and it turned out really well. Only the first song has the effect--it helps the song make you feel like something is about to start. It gets me excited.

--What about the lyrics to "Corona"?

Sho: I imagined space after the big bang and images dissolving into dazzling light. I saw the contrast of empty space and light, and from there I discovered the theme of "sun." Of course, you don't actually read the characters of the song title ("Koukan") as "Corona," but both words do have the same meaning. I took the phenomena of a circle of light appearing around the sun and used it as a metaphor for us. If we're this shining object, we want to shine warmth on the people who are constantly supporting us. That was the message of the lyrics.

Nao: That's intense.

Sho: Of course it's intense. It's the sun!

--Finally I'd like to ask Sho what song he'd like to push?

Sho: Song number 12, "ARMOR RING." If I made anyone think by singing this song, I feel like I'm actually surviving as a singer.

--You use the second-person pronoun "kimi" ("you") in the song "ARMOR RING." Who are you speaking to?

Sho: Well, as a man, I wanted the capacity to be able to sing a wedding song. Actually, one of my relatives got married last year.

--Congratulations.

Sho: Thanks! (Laughs) I couldn't go to the wedding because we were on tour, so I wanted to sing the type of song I would have sung if I had gone to the wedding. If I'm going to make a celebration song, I want to go all the way. I wanted to make people go "Man, this guy's giving me cavities." (Laughs) I was also particular about the chorus work. I think the mixing on the part where Saga and I sing the last "Laaaaa la laaaaa la laaaaa laaaa la" was very guudo.

Saga: Ha ha. (Laughs)

Sho: Since our voices blended so well there, I asked Saga if he wanted to sing with me on "Q." I always want to go to extremes when I'm writing a love song, but with "ARMOR RING," I figured if I'm going to do a wedding song, I've got to go all the way. So I guess "kimi" points to all of you who are listening to the song. It's all of you great guys. (Laughs)

--Is there anything you do in order to write good lyrics?

Sho: I used to try things like playing strange word games or trying to write what I wanted to say in different words, but I think I'm done with that. Everyone in the band writes such good songs and I want to honestly reflect that in my lyrics. Now I feel like people will agree with the songs if I just put my whole body and spirit into singing. Since I just put down the words I felt when I heard the songs for the new album, I didn't have to struggle to write the new tracks. And in return I think we made a really good work.

--Was there anything in particular you did while recording the vocal tracks?

Sho: Up until now I've tried to show off a little--you could say the same with the lyrics. I put too much energy in trying to sing well . . . trying to make a "real" song because we were actually recording something. This time I tried to just enjoy the sound within me, tried to directly include the emotions that flow out of me. I tried to sing naturally. I was conscious of the things that inspired each song while I was singing, and I tried to show that through my voice.

--Can I get a comment about "ARMOR RING" from the original composer, Saga?

Saga: I did originally think it was going to be a song about love. Personally, I wrote "ARMOR RING" while looking at a picture of space. (Laughs) I saw this picture of thousands of stars that all looked like drops of paint had just fallen off of a paintbrush, and was moved to write the song. I wanted the sound to get progressively more layered, and I'm glad to say the song turned out better than I had imagined.

--Do you write on feeling?

Saga: Yes.

--You don't think everything through?

Saga: I do not think everything through! (Laughs) I don't care if it's new or old. I don't care if other people don't enjoy it as long as it's something that I want to do. I only work off of feeling.

--You've also included the track "3. 2. 1. REAL -SE-." Why did you decide to record a track like this?

Hiroto: When we talked about making an album we all decided we wanted a sort of sound effect, a sort of linking song.

Sho: We thought it was necessary to call on the power of instrumentals to change the feel between an album of songs full of such character. The introductory three songs have a grand, fantasy feel to them, however the album moves towards a more realistic world after that. It sounds paradoxical but we thought "3. 2. 1. REAL -SE-" was necessary to separate the fantasy part from the realistic part. The song after it is the rather fantastic "Haru, Sakura no Koro," but to tell the truth, it's sung from a really close distance to the listener and we wanted them to hear the song. "3. 2. 1. REAL -SE-" is like a tunnel from the first three songs to the part of the album with "Haru, Sakura no Koro" and "DEAD SCHOOL SCREAMING." When you go through a tunnel on a train, the moment you leave the tunnel the scenery looks really beautiful--we wanted our listeners to feel that on our album. In that respect, it's used differently from the song "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-." "3. 2. 1. REAL -SE-" cuts off the part with "Corona," "Velvet," and "FANTASY," and begins a new section of the album.

--Which was completed first, "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-" or "jelly fish"?

Saga: We finished "jelly fish" first.

--I find "jelly fish" to be the main track out of these two songs. Who first proposed to include "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-"?

Sho: How should I put it . . . It just came up inevitably between us.

Nao: We were like, "we should include a prelude."

Hiroto: We thought it would be good to have a kind of prologue.

Sho: We felt that an introduction was necessary to a song with as deep a worldview as "jelly fish."

--People usually write "kurage" (jellyfish) with the characters for "water" and "mother," however you used the less standard characters "sea" and "moon." Why was that?

Sho: We like to use old characters: for example the character for "nine" in our name. We didn't go out of our way to use those characters, it really just matched better to the image we had for the song. Jellyfish float in the waves, drifting powerlessly through the ocean. We used that image because it fits perfectly with the song.

--Did you use an acoustic guitar for "jelly fish"?

Tora: I played the acoustic.

--Were you also the one to suggest using an acoustic in the first place?

Tora: Yes. I wanted to wrap everything up cleanly and thought an acoustic would be better than an electric.

Sho: God often decends upon Tora when we're recording. The song didn't sound this acoustic when we first made the demo. I think God came down sometime before I recorded the singing, while Tora was recording the guitar. When I first heard the background track, I was like "what IS this!?" (Laughs)

Tora: I only see God occasionally.

Sho: Thanks to Tora's guitar I was able to sing a good song.

--So after you recorded the clearly acoustic "jelly fish," you turned around and composed the digital-sounding "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-."

Hiroto: Yes.

--Why did you decide to go this direction with your sound?

Hiroto: "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-" was made at a time when "jelly fish" was still not quite as acoustic as it is now. I had this image I thought up when I heard that version of "jelly fish." I imagined a world with the same feeling of "jelly fish," but with a different flow. I just made that image into sound for "Kokkai no Kurage -Instrumental-."

--The limited edition of "Zekkeishoku" includes a bonus DVD with the music video for "Velvet." How was it to make the music video?

Sho: It was awesome!

Hiroto: It was really cool!

--Nao just made a really odd smile when I said that . . . (Laughs)

Nao: Uh. (Laughs) I actually just saw the completed version recently and I thought, "Wow, cool!" I'm sure everyone is smiling inside because it turned out even cooler than we thought.

Sho: Saga is really smiling. (Laughs)

Saga: Yeah. (Laughs) I think that if I saw this video when I was a teenager I would have absolutely wanted to join a band.

--Tora, what did you think when you saw the completed version?

Tora: (Disinterested and cool) The completed version? It was cool.

Everyone: (Laughs)

--You're always cool and collected Tora. (Laughs)

Tora: Yes. (Laughs)

--How was recording?

Sho: Fun! The engineer was really frank. No matter how hard he had to work he was always grinning, saying "Good, this is good! You've made something good here!" (Laughs) I wouldn't think he was doing something hard. It was as though we were enjoying music for a month, and then we were all a little sad when it was over. We made the album in a state where we weren't sure what would happen or where we'd be in the future, but we were able to plainly show our roots and spend some really fun time together. Sometimes we'd get a break and eat these amazing katsu sandwiches. (Laughs)

Hiroto: This time we were able to meet an engineer who felt the same way we do. We learned a lot from him. This was the most creative recording session we've had, the time that I've felt the most like I'm making music. Up until then we'd really put on our working faces to record and it felt like we were shaving off a piece of ourselves just to do it. Of course, this time we also ran a jam-packed schedule, but we were able to enjoy the music so much that it didn't feel that way at all. I learned a lot and it helped me feel more confident about our music. I was too overflowing with enthusiasm when we wrapped up recording so I hugged the band members and engineer five or six times--I was so happy. It was a speech defying, extremely fast one month. I felt like I was graduating from school.

Nao: As I said earlier, I was nervous at first. However, once we got going with the funky engineer I was able to look at recording as something fun and learn something new about drumming. The engineer was enthusiastic and uncompromising. He'd frequently tell the guitarist "You're strings are dead, change them!" or me "The sound of your snare rimshot has changed so let's redo a few takes." I was surprised he was that particular about things, and it really helped open my eyes.

Saga: I really liked how much I was able to learn. I learned what my ideal sound is and what a finished song sounds like. I learned to see through how good I feel about the songs we have now and the songs we're making. I think that skill is important for what the band plans to do in the future.

Tora: I just had a good time with recording. I dislike struggling over my guitar lines so this time I just went in soft and played whatever I was feeling. I was able to record smoothly, without getting into a rut. The engineer was also a really great person. We recorded the whole thing smiling.

--Now I'd like to ask you what new or surprising sides of each other were you able to see while recording? First, why don't you talk about Nao, Sho?

Sho: This time around Nao supported and worried about everything. I found out he was strong-hearted. It's easiest to hear errors in the drums and vocals. But everyone was able to progress, and through that process we confronted our roots and made some fun music. I found myself thinking again about how great a band alice nine. has become.

--How about Nao in regards to Saga?

Nao: It wasn't exactly unexpected, but when Saga finished recording and couldn't fall asleep because he was thinking too much he came over to my place and helped record. He didn't even complain when he slept in my futon. (Laughs) The rhythm team--of the same body and soul.

--You two slept together?

Nao: We did not sleep together! (Laughs)

Saga: It was a good bed . . .

Nao: It's a futon!

Saga: Er, futon.

Sho: The Marie-chan futon. (Laughs) We call it the Marie-chan futon.

Saga: Yeah, yeah. And also--uh, things people shouldn't know about. (Laughs)

Nao: Uh, what, WHAT?

Saga: Hey, ___ .

Nao: (Flustered) NO, don't!

Everyone: (Laughs)

Nao: Careful!

Everyone: Watch out, watch out! (Laughs)

--Well then, could you just lightly touch on that?

Nao: You want to lightly touch it!?

Saga: I was surprised it was so ___ . (Laughs)

Sho: Heeeeey! (Laughs)

Everyone: (Going crazy)

--OK, I understand. (Laughs) Well then, Saga, what new side of Tora did you see?

Saga: Well, the man's like a microwave in the recording studio. You throw something in, shut the door, and when you pull it back out it's something else entirely.

Sho: Just as simple as that! (Laughs)

Nao: Tora bought a guitar just for recording.

Saga: Yeah. He plays the guitar in such a way that it made me think that what we have now is great.

--Tora, what about Hiroto?

Tora: I think Hiroto's grown the most since we started alice nine. It was a fresh experience hearing how well Hiroto played during recording even though he hasn't been playing in bands for that long. I think he's reached music puberty. (Laughs) I was impressed.

--Hiroto, tell me about Sho.

Hiroto: Our band always comes back with more than I could ever imagine. When Sho finished recording the vocals for the first track of the session, "Velvet," I got gooseflesh. He was so good I was shocked. It wasn't exactly unexpected, but at the same time the discovery made me really enthusiastic. Sho's vocals reverberated in my heart. Once again, I found Sho to be a great vocalist.

Sho: I'm happy for you. (Laughs)

--Your next tour is scheduled to start in Shibuya, go to Saitama, Sendai, Niigata, Sapporo, Osaka, Fukuoka, Hiroshima, Nagoya, and then back to Tokyo for a total of ten shows. Isn't this the longest tour in alice nine's history? Could you tell me what to expect from the tour?

Sho: I'd say we fumbled through our last tour since it was our first time alone. We wanted to start by showing people what alice nine. the band was about, instead of showing the crowd all the facets of the band members. However, this time around we've put out our album "Zekkeishoku," and are preparing to show the audience everything about us. Like the word "Zekkei," we want to show our audience a really wonderful scene. We're putting all of our effort into each show around Japan.

Nao: I'm sure it's not just me who thinks we spent a long time underground leading to the release of "Zekkeishoku." We thought about how much we wanted to perform the whole time we were recording. We'll be performing new songs live this time, and we want to unite the audience with heat and fun and vitamin satisfaction! (Laughs)

Saga: I don't think we can exhaust all the energy of "Zekkeishoku" with just ten shows--we have too many thoughts and too much enthusiasm. We'll be finishing the tour at Zepp Tokyo for the time being, but in my head I can't imagine Zepp being the end. (Laughs)

Tora: I like playing live and I want to take the new songs we've made for the album and play them in as many places as I can. That's why we ended up with ten shows. I plan on putting all my energy into each show.

Hiroto: I really think "Zekkeishoku" is the best release we've ever put out. I can't help looking forward to taking the album on the road. To be able to cross the country with my good friends, to be able to put the thoughts and feelings of our fans into our songs--I really look forward to seeing how far alice nine. can go. This will be our first tour in a while so it should be hotter than ever.

--Finally, can you give me a message for your fans?

Nao: We've put out our first full-length album and our hearts our screaming. We want you guys to scream along with us!

Saga: Don't just rely on us. After you've heard this album, think of all sorts of things. Then, when you come to our shows, we'll all be in great shape to resonate together.

Tora: We had a fan club tour and have now put out an album. Now we want to do everything we wanted to do last year but couldn't finish. We'll be doing a lot of new things in the future, and we'll try our best to play as many new songs as we can during the tour.

Hiroto: No more lies, we're going to play exactly what we feel at the moment. We aren't going to worry if you think it's boring or not, we want you to come up against the real alice nine. Let's make some beautiful scenery together!!!!!

Sho: We put our soul into our music because we want alice nine. to have the power to change people. We work hard to make sure our fans can be proud of liking alice nine, and we hope you stick with us in the future.

--Thank you.

Everybody: Thank you!

Interview With Aicle




On October 17, a day before their performance at Tsukicon in Helsinki, Finland, JaME had the opportunity to interview the band Aicle. This interview gave us an illuminating idea of this cheerful oshare kei band, regarding their roots in music, their enthusiasm in performing in Europe and their fervent hope to appeal to European fans with their music and unique style.

Please introduce yourselves and tell us about your roles in Aicle..

emiru: I’m the vocalist, emiru. In the band my responsibilities include writing the songs and singing.
leon: I’m the drummer, leon.
saran: I’m the bassist, saran.
rubi: I’m the guitarist, rubi.

This is one of your first performances abroad and your first in Europe. Are you excited?

emiru: Of course we’re excited! But knowing that all these fans, some of whom have come here from other European countries, have come here to see us and are here waiting for us has made us feel a lot less nervous. Now we’re just feeling good.
rubi: Also the idea of fan mail was very important to us. We thought that now we've come to Finland, we’ll then get lots of mail from here too!

On the same evening you're performing, two other bands will also be playing - vistlip and Dio - who have had both concerts in Europe before. Do you think this is helpful for your own performance?

rubi: Yes, it has been very helpful. For example, with the members of vistlip we’ve talked about the reactions of the European audience and the general routines here, among other things.

What are your expectations for tomorrow’s concert? What kind of impression do you want to give to the Finnish audience?

emiru: Because there are all kinds of visual kei bands, we want to do something that no one else does - we want to leave a theme park-like impression that this is ‘our thing’. After the audience has seen our concert and are going home, we want them to think: ‘How nice that we came here!’

Your looks are very colorful and original. Where do you get the ideas for your costumes?

emiru: Every time we get ourselves new costumes we have a theme. This time our theme was the shoals of fish of the tropical areas. They swim in the ocean and glimmer nicely and we had this kind of an idea in our minds when we were designing our costumes.

How would you describe your music and lyrics to our readers who don’t understand Japanese?

rubi: Aicle.’s theme is that there’s something grotesque in us, but at the same time also it's also colorful pop music - within us the grotesque and the bubblegum pop are mixed. Our lyrics mirror this theme. There might be dark and gloomy elements included, but at the same time there are joyful pop parts - it’s the contrast between these that we want to express.

Please describe your relation to your instrument, or emiru, to your voice. What do you think is its best feature? How did you choose your instrument?

emiru: My own voice has been what I’ve used since I was little. It represents who I am, and this exactly is what makes it an instrument for me. When we formed the band, singing was what I wanted to start doing. At first we made the decision that we want to be a visual kei band, and when the time came to choose the instruments, voice was an easy choice.
leon: What impressed me was the fact that when you hit the drum, it makes a sound. At first the simplicity attracted me, and nowadays I feel like it’s a part of my own body; my hands and feet - my entire body - are included in the action.
saran: Even before I started to play in Aicle. the bass was what sounded best to my ears. It feels most natural, and when I go to a music store, the basses catch my eye immediately. It’s the coolest instrument.
rubi: When I was a teenager, my father played the guitar. So I had a guitar at home, and when I found it and started playing, I got hooked - and I am still that way.

What kinds of goals and hopes do you have for the future? How do you think your concert in Finland tomorrow will affect it?

emiru: We want to make music that people everywhere in the world want to listen to. We hope that after we’ve performed people would like to hear more of it. We hope that the audience would like to see us again and that we would be invited to come to Finland for a second time.

What kind of message would you like to give to our readers?

emiru: When we formed a band in Japan, we never imagined that we would come this far or that people would be able to read an interview that has been done with us in Finland. That’s why we hope you like our music and listen to our CD - and want us to come back here.

Good luck for your concert!

Aicle.: Thank you!

ZORO




Zoro is a colorful oshare kei band that has already gained a number of followers in the indies scene. The up-beat music contains interesting synthesizers, heavy bass lines and energetic drumming. The looks differ from pure white through glittery gold to neon colors, and the album covers are filled with wild animals and stylistic patterns.

The band's uniqueness lies in their prior experience and pure talent, and the singer Ryuuji has a very distinctive voice. The band could be compared to the popular oshare kei band An Cafe, albeit Zoro takes their music to a slightly more bizarre direction.

OFFICIAL WEB SITE

Sunday, May 1, 2011

ARENA37c SPECIAL #73 SCREW - Kazuki x Manabu x Rui Interview


"As a conclusion: I like the members of SCREW (laughs)"
In the last edition, we had been starting the three-volume project featuring SCREW and this time we present you number two with Kazuki, Manabu and Rui. As a special guest Rui's beloved cat Maru-chan also made an appearance and jabbered away.
This issue certainly brings you something usually not seen!

-- Is it OK if we start from where you have met each other?

Kazuki [Rui and I have known each other for a long time already. There was someone we both knew and the first time we talked was probably at a live house.]

-- Had you been in different bands at that time?

Rui [I was in my band and Kazuki was in the band of a friend of mine. It was still at a time, when we were about to or not about to graduate from high school.]

-- So this is how long you have already been acquainted to each other. What has Manabu done at that time?

Manabu [I was probably in Osaka at that time, because only after I finished school I left for Tokyo. The moment I met Kazuki, was by the chance of (forming) SCREW.]

Kazuki [At that time, I really wanted to have another guitarist in the band, so I had been looking for band members and an acquaintance introduced me to Manabu. That was how I met him.]

Manabu [That was about three years ago at this point. It's been about four and a half year since the formation of SCREW, yet, during the first year, I joined the band. As for Rui, I had seen him play in his old band, seen like that I already knew him. The moment I really met him, was when we eventually talked about him joining SCREW.]

-- I see. So what was your first impression of each other?

Manabu [The first time I met Kazuki was at a cafe or so and even though we had just met at that very moment, I let him eat parfait from my spoon, like "aahh"... (laughs)]

-- That's the kind of game you like, Kazuki-kun?

Kazuki [That's more like Byo and Jin. (laughs)]

Manabu [(laughs) At that time, I was a little late to the time I had promised to come, so it was kinda to make up for it. (laughs) That's still what it's like today and it's Kazuki natural self, yet because it was the first face-to-face meeting, the impression still remains strongly. (laughs) Rui on the other hand I sort of knew. In the band he previously played, his hair was really long and completely red and I thought that he was a very scary person. Yet, when I actually met him, I noticed that he wasn't scary at all and actually there was this gap of his, being a really gentle fellow.]

Kazuki [My first impression of Manabu was, that he had a very cool aura, a high school student that looked like someone who'd not get into a circle of friends without resistance. And he was someone who drinks a lot of coffee (laughs).]

-- Even though he is pale like that.

Manabu [But that has DEFINITELY nothing to do with it right?]

All [That was drastic! (outburst of laughter)]

-- It's a bit of a random image, but I think he is more of the tea-type person.

Kazuki [Certainly. (laughs) However, sometimes Manabu has this kind of stern preciseness coming through now and then. (laughs) My first impression of Rui...I can't remember how I first met him, so I can't remember the first impression. (laughs) However, before he joined SCREW there was this shocking "mew".]

--- M..mew?

Kazuki [Yes. (laughs) There was a time, when he was in a rather cute band.]

Manabu [Yes, yes! Honestly, I was also a little surprised about this "mew". From the first band I knew him, he was in an extremely heavy band, being sort of a sadistic bassist, but that was an extreme metamorphosis.]

Rui [Ahahaahaha! Well, that's been part of my personal history. (laughs) I have a lot experienced in my life.]

-- Incredible, that really must be the utmost gap in his aura.

Kazuki [That's certainly one of the great points about Rui. Yet, in that aspect I too, thought he was a very unapproachable person, because he had left a scary impression. But actually he is really fluffy.]

Rui [ahahahaha (laughs) My first impression of Kazuki was, that he was a very correct person, when concerning etiquette. As for Manabu, he seemed to be a serious person you wouldn't be able to make laugh even with a joke. He is actually a very shy person, and in the beginning we didn't talk very much.]

Manabu [We didn't. Jin is also someone who is rather shy in front of others, yet, he is sort of a different type. (laughs) Therefore, at the beginning, Jin and I really didn't talk very much overall. Yet, with Rui it was kinda a natural opening up to him, because he really broke down that wall.]

Kazuki [All members except Rui were facing a number of worries, when our previous bassist quit. He possessed the strength to overcome this trouble of those four of us, which meant, that with Rui joining the band and with five members as a whole again, it was a new start and a make-over of those feelings. We got the positive feeling that we can continue from there on.]

Manabu [Since the quitting of a members is always a big thing for a band, he has saved us with a very good atmosphere. With Rui entering the band, we were once more able to look ahead positively.]

Rui [However, it was also thanks to the four of them, who created a very good atmosphere to actually enter the band. I thought that I can work hard with these four people and that I really wanted to give my best with them together. Honestly.]

-- You really do have a great relationship. Do you know the part of you which resemble each other or which are not alike at all?

Manabu [Me and Kazuki are complete opposites in character, I think. Kazuki is really social and outgoing, while I am completely introverted.]

Kazuki [Yes, exactly. However, that also shows in the guitar-play as such. (laughs)]

Manabu [Yeah. And on a musical basis as much as usual, Kazuki is certainly the one, who has a lot of overlapping opinions, it's really mysterious. From my perspective Kazuki and Rui have very many friends, they are very sociable and close, it seems.]

Kazuki [That's because the other three (Byo, Jin, Manabu) are not very sociable in general. (laughs) They are all shy boys.]

Rui [Yet, when you get to know the three of them, they are not like that at all! (laughs) It just takes a lot of time to get there eventually.]

Kazuki [Yeah. Uhm...can I have some of that? (He says and takes some of the rice omelets, which Manabu had ordered)]

Manabu [Go ahead. It's really good.]

Rui [This is really what it's always like. (laughs)]

-- So what is your favorite type of girls? Ah, but wait, came I try to guess?

Manabu [Yes, please try to guess it DEFINITELY.]

Rui [He's said "definitely" again. (laughs)]

Kazuki [That "definitely" was the sort of challenging in the way that "If you think you can do it then do it!" (laughs)]

Manabu [No, I thought it was interesting. Like, how are you looking at it, kinda?]

-- Of course. (laughs) Rui is the one would likes the little sister type to spoil. Kazuki likes the more grown up type, the beautiful girls with soft curled hair. And Manabu is into the friend-like, natural kind of girls. Right?

Kazuki [For me it was correct. However, I have a rather wide ranging taste, so I like the cute-type as much as the beautiful-type. But not just from the looks. More that I get never tired of being together and girls with a good “mood” are nice. So when it comes to the type, I'd pass that on to Manabu. (heart)]

Manabu [Huh?? Let's not go there! For me the "strike zone" (strike as in bowling) is pretty wide. It could be anyone from 14 to 40 years. (laughs) I am not very particular about the looks, but someone I can have a good time with when being together, would be nice....just like Rui.]

Rui [Huh?? That's the way things are moving on? (laughs) Well, certainly a good flow. (laughs)]

Kazuki [Hey! If Rui now chooses me, then we complete this triangle relationship.]

Rui [Well, then that's what I am going to do. (laughs) It is like that, actually. Someone I can share my hobbies with would be nice. Someone who is cute, which is yet not necessarily obvious. (laughs) So when referring to that, I'd go with Ka-chan. (heart)]

Kazuki [Great, triangle relationship complete. (great excitement)]

Manabu [That's probably nothing to be THAT happy about. (determined) ]

Rui [Ahahahahahah, there he goes again all "determinedly."]

-- Well, then what are your ambitions from here on.

Kazuki [I hope we can incorporate into the sound what SCREW is like with these new five members. We have started again from zero with Rui joining and I think that within this one year we need approval by a number of people, starting out with the fans, therefore, we can do nothing but work hard.]

Rui [I think we can make good music with the incredible relationship of ours. Since Kazuki as the leader is pulling us along, I hope that we can build this into the sound of the new band SCREW together as five people. (At that instant Kazuki passes him 10Yen, much like the bride for his praise.)]

Manabu [This is something very personal; however to me Kazuki is really a very "humane" person. As a leader, he is working extremely hard, and while he is dragging us all along with him, he also has this taste to himself, that he is not perfect. With that at the heart of it, he always wants us to support him, while he also supports all of us with this feeling we share. And I think that this feeling of a band's relationship definitely reflects in the sound. In that sense, just like the other two said, with the five of us, who we are now, the sound changes and I hope the band SCREW will be even better from here on. (That said, Kazuki hands him 50Yen. laughs)]

Rui [Oh! That's 40Yen more than me!]

Kazuki [Ahahahaha! In the end it became this sort of incredible interview, sorry about that. (laughs)]
-fin-